Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 October 2017
This article, written by Adam Woellhaf, describes the legal research training offered by Middle Temple Library to Inns of Court members. It examines the challenges of designing and delivering legal research training to practitioners, as well as offering guidance and advice to others in their own legal research training efforts. It also looks at the potential for using mobile technology in legal research instruction.
1 More information about the Pupils’ Course can be found here: <http://www.middletemple.org.uk/education-and-training/education-and-training/pupils-courses> accessed 29 June 2017
2 Dennis Sears has written in detail about the challenges of teaching how to use print sources of legal research, and striking a balance between print and online sources: ‘The Pedagogical Value of an Integrated Approach to Legal Research Instruction’ (2014) 33 Legal References Services Quarterly 38 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3 Middle Temple Library's first forays into using tablet technology has been described by Satterley, Renae, ‘Tablets in the library: tribally eBooks and iPads at Middle Temple Library’ (2014) 14(2) LIM 145 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4 Ford, Nigel, Miller, David, Moss, Nicola, ‘Web search strategies and human individual differences: Cognitive and demographic factors, internet attitudes and approaches’ (2005) 56(7) Journal of the American Society for Information Science and Technology 741 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5 Brooks, A.W. goes into more detail about using a virtual binder tool in information literacy instruction ‘Using connectivism to guide information literacy instruction with tables’ (2015) 9(2) Journal of Information Literacy 27, 32CrossRefGoogle Scholar <https://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/JIL/article/view/PRA-V9-I2-2> accessed 4 May 2017
6 Sales, Nicola, ‘Flipping the classroom: revolutionising legal research training’ (2013) 13(4) LIM 231, 232CrossRefGoogle Scholar
7 Ainsworth, Nussen, ‘Enhancing Legal Research Skills with Mobile Technology’ (2013) 21 Austl. L. Libr. 258, 259Google Scholar
8 Matamoros, Alex Berrio and Neary, Mary Ann ‘Integrating iPads into legal research instruction at Boston College Law School’ (2013) 27 AALL Spectrum 27, 28Google Scholar
9 As Avery Le describes: “[t]he level of engagement offered by real-time electronic-bases quiz games ‘wakes up’ the crowd and captures the audience's attention tenfold.” ‘Eruption not disruption: free tech for law librarians’ (2015) 20 AALL Spectrum 22, 23Google ScholarPubMed
10 Other interactive technologies have been described by Holderied, Anthony C., such as clickers, interactive white boards, wireless slates and document cameras: ‘Instructional design for the active: Employing interactive technologies and active learning exercises to enhance information literacy’ (2011) 5(1) Journal of Information Literacy 23–32 CrossRefGoogle Scholar <https://ojs.lboro.ac.uk/JIL/article/view/llc-v5-i1-2011-2> accessed 10 May 2017
11 Ren, Wen-Hua, ‘Library instruction and college student self-efficacy in electronic information searching’ (2000) 26 The Journal of Academic Librarianship 323, 327CrossRefGoogle Scholar
12 Hoffman, Marci and Ramsey, Mary, International and Foreign Legal Research (2nd ed, Martinus Nijhoff 2012)Google Scholar
13 Dihydrogen Monoxide < http://www.dhmo.org/facts.html> accessed 21 June 2017
14 Feline reactions to bearded men <http://www.improbable.com/airchives/classical/cat/cat.html> accessed 21 June 2017
15 Fong, Colin, ‘Using Humour to Teach Legal Research’ (2012) 14 Austl. L. Libr. 14 Google Scholar