Free Online Workshop on The Open Casebook Revolution
On July 6, 2022, the Canadian Association of Law Teachers is hosting a free, online workshop entitled The Open Casebook Revolution at noon Eastern time:
"The open access law book 'revolution' ... is gaining momentum. Open access law books are materials compiled and edited for law students, practitioners and/or the public that are freely hosted on websites and as downloadable, searchable, printable, mark-up-able PDFs. In the United States, dozens of open access law casebooks are popping up on platforms such as SSRN, Open Textbook Library, eLangdell and H2O."
"In Canada, CanLII hosts Professor Beswick’s casebook, Tort Law: Cases and Commentaries, and Messrs Fiddick and Wardell’s handbook, The CanLII Manual to British Columbia Civil Litigation. These materials are freely available alternatives to commercial casebooks and handbooks, which are typically expensive, heavy, and have a short shelf-life."
"Open access law books have clear practical, pedagogical and societal advantages. On the practical side, compared to commercial alternatives, open access books are simpler to edit, faster to publish, easier to update, and free. On the pedagogical side, they empower flexibility and innovation. They can be more readily structured to suit the editor’s teaching aims. They can link to podcasts 🎧, videos 📺, blogs, news, articles, books, and judgments. Readers can keyword search and highlight text. Students don’t break their backs carrying them. They can also be integrated with quizzes and exam exercises. On the social side, open access legal materials advance access to justice. Commercial materials are often beyond the reach of the public and, in some cases, students."
The session will feature the 3 Canadian authors mentioned above:
- Samuel Beswick, Assistant Professor, Peter A. Allard School of Law, University of British Columbia
- John Fiddick, Director, Whitelaw Twining.
- Cameron Wardell, Partner, Mathews, Dinsdale & Clark LLP
It will be chaired by Sarah Sutherland, President and CEO, Canadian Legal Information Institute
Labels: access to justice, law schools, legal publishers, legal research and writing, open access
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