Northwestern Event Aims to Interest Law Profs in Ed Tech

Faculty from Northwestern University's Pritzker School of Law recently participated in TEaCH LAW, an event designed to help encourage them to integrate technology in their classrooms.

"Law schools don't have a reputation for being particularly innovative in their teaching methods, but at Northwestern we have a number of faculty who are using technology in particularly engaging and inventive ways," said Alyson Carrel, assistant dean of law and technology initiatives, in a prepared statement.

The event was structured around demonstrations by other faculty members. Carrel kicked the day off with a talk that highlighted three motivations for incorporating technology into a law classroom — the increased use of technology by clients, efficiency and the potential for social justice — and examined the pros and cons of how some legal educators have deployed technology in the past.

Other highlights of the event included:

  • Presentations from instructors and the university IT team in a new classroom designed specifically for blended and active learning;
  • Demonstrations of learning tools such as Lightboard, Canvas, Webex and more;
  • An invitation to partner with a learning design consultant from Northwestern IT; and
  • A closing panel dubbed, "incorporating Technology in the Classroom."

"The challenge as I see it is to think about incorporating technology in ways that foster a vibrant intellectual community and encourage active engagement with the materials," said Deborah Tuerkheimer, the Class of 1940 Research Professor of Law, in a prepared statement. "TEaCH LAW generated a number of concrete ideas in this regard, while sparking a larger conversation — interesting and valuable in its own right — about how we can best serve our students."

About the Author

Joshua Bolkan is contributing editor for Campus Technology, THE Journal and STEAM Universe. He can be reached at [email protected].

Featured

  • closeup of person wearing abstract smart glasses

    Google Unveils Android XR Smart Glasses, Powered by Gemini AI

    More than a decade after the commercial failure of Google Glass, Google is returning to the smart-glasses market, this time betting that advances in artificial intelligence, miniaturized hardware, and conversational computing can turn wearable devices into a mainstream platform.

  • circuit patterns

    Anthropic Launches Lower-Cost Claude Sonnet 5

    Anthropic has released Claude Sonnet 5, positioning the model as its most autonomous mid-tier offering to date and a lower-cost alternative to its flagship Opus 4.8 system. The company said the model can plan multi-step tasks, operate tools such as browsers and terminals, and complete agentic work at a level that previously required larger and more expensive models.

  • Student classroom scene with diverse learners attentively engaging in lecture, using laptops

    The AI Literacy Gap No One Expected

    While Gen Z may be advanced at generating quick outputs or using free LLMs for surface-level tasks, they need to develop critical thinking, communication, and analysis skills.

  • abstract cybersecurity data protection

    Rubrik Intros Google Workspace Data Protection

    Rubrik has announced the launch of Rubrik Data Protection for Google Workspace, a product the company said is designed to help enterprise customers protect data and restore operations across Google Workspace environments.