Unit Code: LAW109: Criminal Justice and Procedure
Difficulty: Easy
Lecturer: George
Tutor: Anne
Year and Semester Taken: Semester 2, 2011
Amount of reading required: 30-40 pages per night
Workload: Fairly Heavy
Comments:
The cases in this course are probably about as interesting as it might get. You've got murders, BDSM, Rape, Battered Wife Syndrome, Drugs etc... pretty much all the sort of stuff you need to make your modern day law and order type show. For the most part George is an excellent lecturer, there is no doubt that he knows his stuff and his lecture slides are straight to the point. His lectures are incredibly engaging and he uses a combination of videos and pictures and stories and examples to keep you engaged. In attending his lectures you'll pretty much always understand what he's saying - it's hard to get lost. The course material is engaging and obviously the cases are interesting. The texts are not your typical black letter law type texts there are case studies and historical facts. George contextualises all of these things with relevant examples which is very good. He also brings in guest lecturers such as ex-magistrates.
The downside, from my experience, George often got carried away with explaining/justifying the rubric or assessment scheme and this would occupy much of the lecture time. The other thing that would occupy much of the lecture time is that he would only really get through a few points in each topic (maybe 3 or 4 at the most). This is because sometimes he spent a bit too much time on the entertainment part of the lecture.
The assessment criteria is absolutely ridiculous. It's incredibly demanding (see below). Basically, there was an overemphasises on researching for law reform commissions. Most of the assignments actually involved writing unofficial law reform submissions. It gets really tedious and boring. You never actually really get to "apply the law".
Another crucial downside which pretty much everyone I know complained about is that the assignment questions were never posted up on time. Throughout the entire semester promises were made that assignment questions would be posted up on Blackboard at specified times, a majority of the time these assignments were posted up hours late and the deadline was only extended by an hour or so. The blame for this was always placed on the IT department. There was a heavy reliance on blackboard and collaborating with groups through blackboard. In my opinion the short comings of the assignments being posted up so late were never adequately compensated for, and the group assignments were hellish.
Anne is a lovely tutor, she's been teaching for quite some time so she has extensive knowledge of the law, however she speaks very very quietly.So you need to sit up close to hear what she is saying.
In retrospect, this course was enjoyable, probably one of the most enjoyable you'll ever do at the law school... if you can overlook the crazy assessment demands.
Assessment breakdown:
- A Short Essay (15%) - 1,000 words
- Collaborative Online Blog (15%) - Part 1 - 1,200 words: this requires you to collaborate with a random group of people online using blackboard
- Collaborative Online Blog (15%) - Part 2 - 1,600 words: this requires you to collaborate with a random group of people online using blackboard
- Online Journal (10%) - You need to answer approximately 5-6 questions each week and post them online (these honestly take about 5-6 hours a week depending). One of them took over one day.
- Final Assignment (45%) - 2,000 Words: This is a three part assignment, its all theoretical and there is no hypothetical element at all. You don't need to answer any scenario based question or anything like that. And you don't really get to "apply the law", only talk about it.
The upside to this overly demanding assessment criteria is that there is real potential to get a HD in this subject (I missed out by a mere 3 marks).