Continuous and pedagogically sound assessment : A new economy of power relations in Australian Law schools


Autoria(s): Ball, Matthew James
Contribuinte(s)

Curtis, B.

Matthewman, S.

McIntosh, T.

Data(s)

01/12/2007

Resumo

In recent decades, assessment practices within Australian law schools have moved from the overwhelming use of end-of-year closed-book examinations to an increase in the use of a wider range of techniques. This shift is often characterised as providing a ‘better’ learning environment for students, contributing more positively to their own ‘personal development’ within higher education, or, considered along the lines of critical legal thought, as ‘liberating’ them from the ‘conservatising’ and ‘indoctrinating’ effects of the power relations that operate in law schools. This paper seeks to render problematic such liberal-progressive narratives about these changes to law school assessment practices. It will do so by utilising the work of French historian and philosopher Michel Foucault on power, arguing that the current range of assessment techniques demonstrates a shift in the ‘economy’ of power relations within the law school. Rather than ‘liberating’ students from relations of power, these practices actually extend the power relations through which students are governed. This analysis is intended to inform legal education research and assessment practice by providing a far more nuanced conceptual framework than one that seeks to ‘free’ law students from these ‘repressive’ practices, or hopes to ‘objectively’ contribute to their ‘personal development’.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45890/

Publicador

The Sociological Association of Australia (TASA)

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/45890/1/369.pdf

http://www.tasa.org.au/conferences/conferencepapers07/papers/369.pdf

Ball, Matthew James (2007) Continuous and pedagogically sound assessment : A new economy of power relations in Australian Law schools. In Curtis, B., Matthewman, S., & McIntosh, T. (Eds.) TASA 2007 Conference Proceedings: Public Sociologies: Lessons and Trans-Tasman Comparisons, The Sociological Association of Australia (TASA), Auckland, New Zealand.

Direitos

Copyright 2006 Matthew James Ball

Fonte

Faculty of Law; School of Justice

Palavras-Chave #189999 Law and Legal Studies not elsewhere classified #legal education #assessment #Foucault #power #pedagogy
Tipo

Conference Paper