Issues in the Use of Computer-Aided Instruction in Law -- Why Use a Computer in Teaching and Learning Law? -- How Can the Law Professor Best Use Computer-aided Exercises? -- How Do Computer-aided Exercises in Law Work? -- Creating New Computer-Aided Exercises -- The Authoring Process and Instructional Design -- EDUNET: Sharing Computer-Based Resources for Law Teaching -- The EDUCOM Workshop: A Model -- Network Experience and Experiments -- Review and Summary of Theory and Issues -- Computer-aided Instruction in Law: Theories, Techniques, and Trepidations
Russell W. Burris is director of the Consulting Group on Instructional Design and professor of educational psychology at the University of Minnesota. Dr. Burris teaches courses on the teaching-learning process in the Law School of the University of Minnesota. Robert E. Keeton is associate dean and Langdell Professor of Law at Harvard Law School; he is the author of computer-aided exercises in torts, trial practice, and insurance law. Carolyn P. Landis is secretary of the corporation of EDUCOM. Before joining EDUCOM, she was a program officer in the New Jersey Department of Higher Education. Roger Park, professor of law at the University of Minnesota, is the author of ten computer exercises in evidence, civil procedure, and professional responsibility.