Skip to main content
Start of main content.

Belonging in the law classroom: rising to the challenge of creating a place where every new law student belongs

A small group of students in a classroom

The CPLE brings to you a series of video presentations from the 2022 Professional Legal Education Conference. 

Law students face many challenges when it comes to engaging positively with their studies. They may live in regional or remote locations, have caring responsibilities, live with a disability, or come from a disadvantaged socio-economic background. Even students with strong external support systems can struggle to adapt to the demanding learning environment associated with completing a professionally accredited law degree. The Belonging in the Law Classroom Project aims to improve the experience and retention of first-year Law students at UniSA by better understanding and fostering their sense of belonging in the online or physical classroom.

Past studies (e.g., Ahn,& Davis, 2020; Gijn, Grosvenor, & Huisman, 2020) have identified a strong causal link between students’ sense of belonging at University and student retention. This has led to a sustained focus on developing institutional strategies to improve student engagement, largely focused on extra-curricular supports or activities, but less focus on what happens in the classroom to foster student belonging.

Working with law discipline staff and students, this Project will identify existing classroom-based supports and develop new strategies for fostering belonging in the classroom across the compulsory first-year courses within the UniSA Law Program. Practical frameworks, exemplars and resources will be compiled to provide First Year Law teachers with building blocks that they can utilise to foster student belonging in their classroom. By focusing on student belonging in the classroom, this Project will provide a fresh perspective for teaching staff in Law from which to understand student retention and engagement and create space for programmatic approaches to curriculum review and assessment.

See the presentation here.

 

Blog listing

CSCDL

Forget Me Nodes instead of Forget-Me-Nots (PART ONE)

Can blockchain ever forget? GDPR promises the “right to be forgotten,” but blockchain’s permanence challenges privacy. Explore this clash in Part 1 of our series.

Read article
Read more about Forget Me Nodes instead of Forget-Me-Nots (PART ONE)
CCLG

Bringing Beer Law to Life: A Celebration of Craft, Community, and Conversation

Beer Law” (CUP, 2025) launched on 20 November at Madocke Brewing, Ashmore. This first-of-its-kind book explores the legal, cultural, and commercial dimensions of beer - one of humanity’s oldest and most loved beverages.

Read article
Read more about Bringing Beer Law to Life: A Celebration of Craft, Community, and Conversation
CPLE

The POSITIVE Power of MAKING Mistakes: Why Getting It Wrong is Essential for Legal Learning

Law academics Tammy Johnson and Caroline Strevens discuss the benefits of embracing a 'mistakes friendly approach'.

Read article
Read more about The POSITIVE Power of MAKING Mistakes: Why Getting It Wrong is Essential for Legal Learning
CSCDF

When Seeing Is No Longer Believing: Five Ways to Tackle Deepfakes

As deepfake technology becomes more difficult to detect, the question shifts from if they will cause damage to when—and to what extent. This Blog post written by students in the Internet Law Research Clinic at Bond University explores this important topi

Read article
Read more about When Seeing Is No Longer Believing: Five Ways to Tackle Deepfakes