Book contents
- Modernising Legal Education
- Modernising Legal Education
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- About the Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Do Lawyers Need to Learn to Code?
- 2 Experiential Legal Education
- 3 Skills Swap?
- 4 Scaling the Gap
- 5 Bringing ODR to the Legal Education Mainstream
- 6 Design Comes to the Law School
- 7 Developing ‘NextGen’ Lawyers through Project-Based Learning
- 8 Same As It Ever Was?
- 9 Ludic Legal Education from Cicero to Phoenix Wright
- 10 The Gamification of Written Problem Questions in Law
- 11 Virtually Teaching Ethics
- 12 Paths to Practice
- 13 ‘Complicitous and Contestatory’
- Afterword
- References
11 - Virtually Teaching Ethics
Experiencing the Discrepancy between Abstract Ethical Stands and Actual Behaviour Using Immersive Virtual Reality
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 December 2019
- Modernising Legal Education
- Modernising Legal Education
- Copyright page
- Contents
- Figures
- Tables
- About the Contributors
- Foreword
- Introduction
- 1 Do Lawyers Need to Learn to Code?
- 2 Experiential Legal Education
- 3 Skills Swap?
- 4 Scaling the Gap
- 5 Bringing ODR to the Legal Education Mainstream
- 6 Design Comes to the Law School
- 7 Developing ‘NextGen’ Lawyers through Project-Based Learning
- 8 Same As It Ever Was?
- 9 Ludic Legal Education from Cicero to Phoenix Wright
- 10 The Gamification of Written Problem Questions in Law
- 11 Virtually Teaching Ethics
- 12 Paths to Practice
- 13 ‘Complicitous and Contestatory’
- Afterword
- References
Summary
The CAVE experience is an immersive virtual reality (IVR) environment employing high-resolution, 3D video and audio technology. Using the CAVE, researchers at University College London designed an IVR scenario intended to echo the logical structure of a traditional ‘trolley scenario’ problem, and deployed this activity within an undergraduate Law and Ethics Course. In this chapter we explore how the use of virtual reality can offer students an unparalleled opportunity to reflect on the dissonance between the behaviour they adopt when faced with an ethical dilemma, and the theoretical stance they propose during class discussion. We explore how this personalisation gives rise to sustained student engagement borne out of a desire to understand the discrepancy between principle and practice. Our chapter considers the potential of IVR technology when teaching ethics to future and current professionals. We conclude by considering how such technology can offer more dynamic opportunities for student reflection and how IVR might be sensibly integrated into a broader legal ethics curriculum.
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- Information
- Modernising Legal Education , pp. 204 - 220Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020
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