Publication Date
2003
Abstract
This article celebrates the 25th anniversary of the publication of Gary Bellow and Bea Moulton's The Lawyering Process by looking at the work from personal and theoretical perspectives. From the personal perspective, the authors discuss how The Lawyering Process influenced them as teachers and scholars. From the theoretical perspective, the authors show how the book modeled various metacognitive processes. Combining the personal with the theoretical, the article shows how The Lawyering Process challenged lawyers to be-come aware of their own thinking by demonstrating how it challenged the authors to do so.
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
John M. A. DiPippa, Martha M. Peters, The Lawyering Process: An Example of Metacognition at Its Best, 10 Clinical L. Rev. 311 (2003).
Included in
Available at: https://lawrepository.ualr.edu/faculty_scholarship/181