Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies

This article introduces and reviews the experience of video-conference teaching in a comparative Indigenous law course taught by a team of legal colleagues. This teaching team delivers an internationally comparative Indigenous rights course to law students in Canada, the United States, Aotearoa/New...

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Main Authors: Fiona Martin, Kate Collier, Shirley Carlon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Bond University
Series:Legal Education Review
Online Access:http://ler.scholasticahq.com/article/6223-mentoring-first-year-distance-education-students-in-taxation-studies.pdf
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spelling doaj-ff971c45aaed491380c825d8b95403142020-11-25T02:55:10ZengBond UniversityLegal Education Review1033-2839Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation StudiesFiona MartinKate CollierShirley CarlonThis article introduces and reviews the experience of video-conference teaching in a comparative Indigenous law course taught by a team of legal colleagues. This teaching team delivers an internationally comparative Indigenous rights course to law students in Canada, the United States, Aotearoa/New Zealand and Australia simultaneously via fully interactive live video-conferencing technology. The international universities currently involved include: University of Ottawa, University of Saskatchewan, University of Oklahoma, University of Auckland, Monash University and the University of Queensland. Situated in six sites in different parts of the globe and in various time zones, this team teaches together to discover just how much their countries have in common in relation to Indigenous issues. Not only does the course explore similarities and differences in the experiences of the four jurisdictions but it also challenges both students and teachers to understand why those differences have occurred. The article focuses on two significant aspects of this course: first, the dynamics and logistics of teaching and delivering a course through video-conferencing to a number of global sites; and secondly, an analysis of the benefits and advantages of an internationally comparative Indigenous law course. It aims to enable other law teachers to consider the suitability of video-conferencing for international and comparative areas of legal study and for others to learn from the experiences of this team in relation to the benefits and difficulties involved in this teaching mode.http://ler.scholasticahq.com/article/6223-mentoring-first-year-distance-education-students-in-taxation-studies.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fiona Martin
Kate Collier
Shirley Carlon
spellingShingle Fiona Martin
Kate Collier
Shirley Carlon
Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
Legal Education Review
author_facet Fiona Martin
Kate Collier
Shirley Carlon
author_sort Fiona Martin
title Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
title_short Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
title_full Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
title_fullStr Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
title_full_unstemmed Mentoring First-Year Distance Education Students in Taxation Studies
title_sort mentoring first-year distance education students in taxation studies
publisher Bond University
series Legal Education Review
issn 1033-2839
description This article introduces and reviews the experience of video-conference teaching in a comparative Indigenous law course taught by a team of legal colleagues. This teaching team delivers an internationally comparative Indigenous rights course to law students in Canada, the United States, Aotearoa/New Zealand and Australia simultaneously via fully interactive live video-conferencing technology. The international universities currently involved include: University of Ottawa, University of Saskatchewan, University of Oklahoma, University of Auckland, Monash University and the University of Queensland. Situated in six sites in different parts of the globe and in various time zones, this team teaches together to discover just how much their countries have in common in relation to Indigenous issues. Not only does the course explore similarities and differences in the experiences of the four jurisdictions but it also challenges both students and teachers to understand why those differences have occurred. The article focuses on two significant aspects of this course: first, the dynamics and logistics of teaching and delivering a course through video-conferencing to a number of global sites; and secondly, an analysis of the benefits and advantages of an internationally comparative Indigenous law course. It aims to enable other law teachers to consider the suitability of video-conferencing for international and comparative areas of legal study and for others to learn from the experiences of this team in relation to the benefits and difficulties involved in this teaching mode.
url http://ler.scholasticahq.com/article/6223-mentoring-first-year-distance-education-students-in-taxation-studies.pdf
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