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E-book
Author Smith, Alfred G

Title Cognitive Styles in Law Schools
Published Austin, TX : University of Texas Press, 2012

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Description 1 online resource (191 pages)
Summary Annotation People differ in their cognitive styles--their ways of getting and using information to solve problems and make decisions. Alfred G. Smith and his associates studied these differences in a selected group of over 800 students at a score of law schools throughout the United States. Two major cognitive styles were identified: that of the monopath, who follows a single route of established principles and procedures, and that of the polypath, who takes many routes, as circumstances suggest.A battery of both original and standard tests was administered to both law students and their professors to investigate differences in cognitive style and their relationships to self-image, anxiety, and academic achievement. This also revealed differences in prevailing styles at different schools.The results will be of special interest to readers concerned with legal education, to psychologists, and to behavioral scientists. The research format developed here will serve equally well for raising significant questions about the professions of medicine, education, social work, and others in which cognitive and communication styles play a central role in determining outcomes
Notes Print version record
Subject Law -- Study and teaching -- United States
Cognitive styles -- United States
Cognitive styles
Law -- Study and teaching
United States
Form Electronic book
Author Nester, Patrick A
Pulford, Lynn H
ISBN 9781477304990
1477304991