This past weekend, the 23rd Annual CALI Conference for Law School Computing was held at IIT Chicago-Kent College of Law. The conference featured several sessions on the flipped classroom:
- Flipping the Classroom in Legal Skills Courses
- Flipping the Law School Classroom: Using Technology Outside the Classroom to Engage Students in the Classroom
- Flipping Flop?: exploring whether guest lectures can use the flipped classroom format
There were also sessions on changing how law is taught:
- H2O – Create Free Adaptable Digital Casebooks
- Games Theory: Engaging Students Through Games in the Classroom
- How do you deliver?… An example of how technology has changed the face of meetings and collaboration.
- How to Create a Distance Education Course
For those who were unable to attend, the sessions were recorded and are available (along with videos of past conferences) on the CALI YouTube channel. See the complete agenda here which gives a full description of the session along with the YouTube recording along with the presenter slides if available. Selected sessions including the two keynote addresses are listed below:
- Keynote Josh Clark – The Seven Deadly Myths of Mobile
- Lecture Capture has a new name
- Engaging Faculty in the Use of Technology Without Using the “T” Word
- Up in the clouds
- Legal education, technology & law practice
- Keynote William Henderson
- How to Steer with 20 Hands on the Wheel: Tech Tools That Guide and Stimulate Collaboration