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2 J. Legal Stud. Educ. 1 (1984)

handle is hein.journals/jlse2 and id is 1 raw text is: 











   REDESIGNING THE REQUIRED UNDERGRADUATE BUSINESS LAW COURSE

          John D. Donnell, Professor  of Business Law,*
            Indiana University, Bloomington,  Indiana


    Although I have had  the same wife for 41 years,  the same car
for 12, much  of my clothing is more  than 20 years old,  the same
tendency does not seem  to apply to my teaching.   I redo my notes
every  semester, and  I have  preferred  to shift  to  teaching an
entirely different course  or courses every few years.   Last year
I taught the  required undergraduate course for  the first time in
five years.  Although I  did not then have the  time to experiment
with  major  changes in  it,  or  even  to give  the  matter  much
thought,  the experience  did stimulate me  to  devote part  of my
sabbatical leave in the Spring  of 1983 to an attempt  to sort out
my ideas  about this course.   This time was  used to  examine the
thinking of others  as recorded in the literature  relating to the
teaching  of law  in business  schools and  in the  prefaces  to a
large  number  of  business  law   textbooks.   I  also  discussed
curriculum  and  methodology  with  law  teachers  and  others  at
several schools.

    This  paper  is  the  product  of  that research  and  my  own
ruminations on the subject.  One of  the conclusions I came to was
that,  since  few  business  students  will  take  more  than  one
law-related course,  that course should be  broader than  either a
contracts-focused course  or  a government  regulation course  and
should  have  as  its  primary  purpose  helping  the  student  to
understand  the  legal  system  and   its  processes  rather  than
specific rules  of law.   A  second conclusion  reached was  that,
although there  is no immediate  crisis, now is a  propitious time
for business law teachers to  review their courses and to consider
revamping them, especially the required undergraduate course.

    There are  several reasons  why  I think  now is  the time  to
review and redesign  this course.  First, as can  be inferred from
statements above,  I tend to  believe in change for  change's sake
when it  comes to courses  of instruction.  Freshness on  the part
of  the  teacher   is  a  precondition  for   effective  teaching;
freshness  without  change  is  unlikely.   Also  the  process  of
redesigging a  course is valuable because  it forces  the designer
to consider objectives  anew.  Most of us  tend to slip  back into
comfortable  grooves   in   both  subject   matter  and   teaching
methodology and need, periodically, to make new tracks.

    *The  author   is  indebted  to  many   people  for   help  in
preparation of the  paper.  He particularly wishes  to acknowledge
comments  on an  earlier draft  by  Thomas W.  Dunfee, Charles  M.
Hewitt, Dugald W. Hudson, Jane P.  Mallor, Michael B. Metzger, and
Frances E.  Zollers.  Remaining  gaffes, goofs,  and glitches  are
the responsibility of the author.


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