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Article
Derrick Bell’s Community-Based Classroom
Columbia Journal of Race and Law
  • Joy Radice, University of Tennessee College of Law
Document Type
Article
Abstract

In Derrick Bell’s Community-based Classroom, I argue that Derrick Bell enhanced his participatory pedagogical approach to teaching constitutional law by intentionally creating community within the law school classroom — a community that humanized the students’ educational experience. This essay explores three ways in which he created community: through his participatory, student-centered course structure; his social classroom environment; and his interactive self-assessments. Over the past few years, legal education has come under indictment in the media for not adequately training lawyers for practice. Bell’s community-based classroom responds to this indictment, fusing both theory and practice in teaching doctrinal constitutional law courses that aim to transform students into competent, caring professionals.

Publication Date
1-1-2012
Disciplines
Citation Information
Radice, Joy, Derrick Bell’s Community-Based Classroom (June 11, 2012). Columbia Journal of Race and Law, Vol. Special Feature, 2012, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2082439