Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
In 1870, Christopher Columbus Langdell introduced the case method of teaching at Harvard, and dramatically altered the course of legal education in the United States. His method, involving student examination of judicial decisions coupled with Socratic style analysis, ultimately gained widespread acceptance. Today, most US law teachers use the case method. They continue, to varying degrees, to use Socratic questioning as part of that method. But, despite the method's widespread adoption, it has always had critics including both law students and law teachers.
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2. See Blum & Lobaco, ‘The Case Against the Case System’ (1984) 4 Cal Lwyr; Boyer & Cramton, ‘American Legal Education: An Agenda for Research and Reform’ (1974) 59 Cornell L Rev 221, 224.
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17. Id.
18. Id.
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22. Id.
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46. 338 US 25 (1949).
47. 367 US 643 (1961).
48. 367 US at 672.
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50. See Lean v United States 468 US 897 (1984).
51. Id.
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69. C. C. Langdell, supra note 21, at viii.
70. Id.
71. Id.
72. Id.
73. Keener Report, supra not? 14, at 481–82.
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76. See eg, New York v Quarles 467 US 649 (1984).
77. Compare Mapp v Ohio 367 US 643 (1961) with Leon v United States 468 US 897 (1984).
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80. Fessenden, supra note 12, at 506.
81. See J. Henderson & R. Pearson, The Torts Process (2nd edn, 1981).