- Department: The York Law School
- Credit value: 20 credits
- Credit level: H
- Academic year of delivery: 2022-23
This module considers core areas of law: criminal law; European Union Law; the law of Obligations; Property Law; Public Law. These are the foundations of legal knowledge associated with progression to the legal professions.
Occurrence | Teaching period |
---|---|
A | Autumn Term 2022-23 to Summer Term 2022-23 |
This module enables you to continue to develop and deepen, to an advanced level, your understanding of key legal institutions, key areas of law (the 'core' subject areas of Criminal Law; European Law; Obligations (Contract, Tort and Restitution); Property Law (Land Law and Equity); Public Law (Constitutional and Administrative Law), and the relationships between and among them. You will build on the skills associated with problem-based learning, which you started to develop in Foundations in Law 1 and 2. You will continue to develop, and to evidence through your oral and written communication, key skills associated with legal scholarship, including those relating to the undertaking of research, the development of reasoned arguments, the use of evidence, and the practice of critical evaluation. You will also continue to reflect on the development of your learning, and to consider strategies and techniques for developing your competence as a scholar.
By the end of this module, you should be able to:
(i) contribute constructively and significantly to the effective functioning of a student law firm in the context of problem-based learning;
(ii) communicate with high levels of clarity and precision, orally and in writing, with student and staff colleagues, about issues relevant to law;
(iii) undertake, describe and reflect on advanced research tasks relevant to law;
(iv) describe and explain, at an advanced level, and in a comprehensive and systematic manner, key legal institutions, key areas of law, the relationships between and among them, and interests, perspectives and contexts relevant to law;
(v) develop reasoned, sophisticated argument and practise critical evaluation at an advanced level in relation to law;
(vi) reflect comprehensively and in depth and draw conclusions on the development and management of your learning, and use them to develop plans for future learning;
(vii) demonstrate a positive contribution to your learning and development, and those of others, by regular attendance and active participation in learning activities in Foundations PBL workshops.
Learning in this module builds directly on that in Foundations in Law 1 and 2, and complements Foundations in Law 4.
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Open Exam (7-day week) | 50 |
Open Exam (7-day week) | 50 |
None
Formative opportunities available through PBL activities, in which students can, with support, scrutinise, respond to and discuss scenarios and questions of the type that will form the assessment. Opportunities to generate and discuss items related to PBL activities, which will feed forward into portfolio for 'Foundations in Law - Portfolio and Reflections: Year 2 Senior Status' module.
Task | % of module mark |
---|---|
Open Exam (7-day week) | 50 |
Open Exam (7-day week) | 50 |
Ongoing feedback on progress in PBL.
Written feedback and surgery consultation opportunities to discuss summative items, in Spring and Summer terms as appropriate.
Foundations in Law III forms part of the problem-based learning component of the law undergraduate programmes. PBL does not involve the use of 'reading lists' in the conventional sense. A range of OUP texts relating to legal institutions, and the 'core' subject areas of legal learning, namely Criminal Law; European Law; Obligations (Contract, Tort and Restitution); Property Law (Land Law and Equity); Public Law (Constitutional and Administrative Law) are available to students through the Law Trove resource to which YLS subscribes.