Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes
The purpose of this article is to examine whether legal reasoning skills can be appropriately assessed in a law degree, using multiple-choice question assessment. The use of multiple-choice assessment in university law schools is common, although not universally accepted as an effective pedagogical...
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2021-04-01
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doaj-6f004fce042c4c23b3e9f62c6b048cf12021-04-29T01:57:32ZengBond UniversityLegal Education Review1033-28392021-04-01Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and AttitudesDanielle BozinFelicity DeaneJames DuffyThe purpose of this article is to examine whether legal reasoning skills can be appropriately assessed in a law degree, using multiple-choice question assessment. The use of multiple-choice assessment in university law schools is common, although not universally accepted as an effective pedagogical tool. In this article, both quantitative and qualitative empirical research methods have been adopted to examine whether the unique skill of legal reasoning is amenable to being tested through multiple-choice assessment. The position argued is that multiple-choice assessment, when properly constructed using identified guiding principles, is an efficient and effective way to assess legal reasoning abilities.https://ler.scholasticahq.com/article/23484-can-multiple-choice-exams-be-used-to-assess-legal-reasoning-an-empirical-study-of-law-student-performance-and-attitudes.pdf |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Danielle Bozin Felicity Deane James Duffy |
spellingShingle |
Danielle Bozin Felicity Deane James Duffy Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes Legal Education Review |
author_facet |
Danielle Bozin Felicity Deane James Duffy |
author_sort |
Danielle Bozin |
title |
Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes |
title_short |
Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes |
title_full |
Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes |
title_fullStr |
Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes |
title_full_unstemmed |
Can Multiple Choice Exams Be Used to Assess Legal Reasoning? An Empirical Study of Law Student Performance and Attitudes |
title_sort |
can multiple choice exams be used to assess legal reasoning? an empirical study of law student performance and attitudes |
publisher |
Bond University |
series |
Legal Education Review |
issn |
1033-2839 |
publishDate |
2021-04-01 |
description |
The purpose of this article is to examine whether legal reasoning skills can be appropriately assessed in a law degree, using multiple-choice question assessment. The use of multiple-choice assessment in university law schools is common, although not universally accepted as an effective pedagogical tool. In this article, both quantitative and qualitative empirical research methods have been adopted to examine whether the unique skill of legal reasoning is amenable to being tested through multiple-choice assessment. The position argued is that multiple-choice assessment, when properly constructed using identified guiding principles, is an efficient and effective way to assess legal reasoning abilities. |
url |
https://ler.scholasticahq.com/article/23484-can-multiple-choice-exams-be-used-to-assess-legal-reasoning-an-empirical-study-of-law-student-performance-and-attitudes.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT daniellebozin canmultiplechoiceexamsbeusedtoassesslegalreasoninganempiricalstudyoflawstudentperformanceandattitudes AT felicitydeane canmultiplechoiceexamsbeusedtoassesslegalreasoninganempiricalstudyoflawstudentperformanceandattitudes AT jamesduffy canmultiplechoiceexamsbeusedtoassesslegalreasoninganempiricalstudyoflawstudentperformanceandattitudes |
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