Article: Looking on the Bright Side: Four Ways Zoom Makes Legal Research Instruction Better

RIPS Law Librarian Blog writes…

Guest blog by Matthew Flyntz, Research Law Librarian for Instructional Services, UC Irvine School of Law


As many of you are surely experiencing this semester, teaching legal research virtually poses a number of challenges, but I have found that it also provides a few benefits over traditional in-person instruction. In a world of negativity, I’d like to look on the bright side and focus on those positives in this post.

First, teaching via Zoom allows students to share their screens with me and their classmates. I used a flipped classroom model this semester, where students spent most of their in-class time working through a range of practice research problems. In a traditional classroom setting, I would ask a volunteer to explain their process, and I would attempt to recreate it on my computer, which is linked to a projector. Via Zoom, the volunteer can simply share their screen and walk everyone through their research process. This has saved time and has avoided the problem of miscommunications, where I, as translator, do not quite understand what the student is trying to tell me. Students can also share their screen to allow me to “diagnose” problems. In a traditional classroom, a student might say something like, “I’m not seeing that option,” or “I ended up with a different result,” and I would either need to hover awkwardly over their shoulder, or try to figure out where they went wrong by asking them questions. With screen sharing, I can quickly see what the student is seeing, and can diagnose their problems much more quickly and with no awkward hovering.

I have also found that more students ask me questions during in-class activities via Zoom than they would in a classroom setting. I believe this is because I allow private chatting, so students can ask me questions privately without their peers knowing that they asked a question at all. This allows me to respond quickly to students who are struggling with the activities (again, with no awkward hovering). But I’ve also found that students are asking more interesting, thoughtful questions that the whole class would benefit from hearing the answers to. I just say something like, “A really good question came into the private chat,” without identifying the question asker. Again, I think the anonymity encourages students to ask questions they might be too shy or embarrassed to ask in a classroom setting.

Zoom has also made certain types of participation, like polls, easier. In a classroom, I would provide a slide with a link to Poll Everywhere, students would navigate to the site and respond to the question there, and I would display the results on the screen. With Zoom, I can embed polls into the presentation itself, so students do not have to navigate to a different screen. Of course, Zoom lacks many of the advanced features of Poll Everywhere and other polling services, but for basic multiple-choice polls, Zoom works fine.

Read the full article at  https://ripslawlibrarian.wordpress.com/2020/10/19/looking-on-the-bright-side-four-ways-zoom-makes-legal-research-instruction-better/