Should the Basics of Law Be Taught in High School? (As an Elective)
The debate is finished. The distribution of the voting points and the winner are presented below.
After 5 votes and with 3 points ahead, the winner is...
- Publication date
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- Standard
- Number of rounds
- 3
- Time for argument
- Three days
- Max argument characters
- 30,000
- Voting period
- One week
- Point system
- Multiple criterions
- Voting system
- Open
Should high schoolers have a basic knowledge of law? I think so. Not that it should be required, but there should be a class for it. I would hate to go to law school only to realize that I don't like it.
Both sides are in agreement about teaching of law as a key agreement - the matter of argument is whether this teaching should be mandatory or optional.
The debate comes between an optional or a mandatory class. But con makes a better argument as to why teaching the law should be mandatory, and pro appears to agree with his case, arguing it should be a required elective.
As this resolution really boils down to semantics, I’m forced to decide based on my interpretation of the resolution. The resolution and the description appear to clearly imply an optional and non-required element - and as such I feel that both sides agreeing it should be required counts as con negating the resolution.
Arguments to con.
The contender was more arguing for a better version of the instigator's argument instead of an opposite or a difference that was enough to say he was on the opposing side.
Both conceded, there was no serious disagreement, this topic should probably be debated again with a clearer title such as "Should every college have to offer a law course"
Both sides seemed pretty solidly Pro. Con wanted to up law to a requirement and Pro was fine with that.
Both conceded.
Had there been a definition for elective, this could still be weighted. As is, there were too many unanswered questions; such as is a normal elective different from a required class?
I just like birds, man. All the birds.
i guess There was none a short while ago
Wait, are there just a bunch of bird enthusiasts on DART? lol
i dont think that is a kingfisher. but yes i agree it looks somewhat similar
And your profile is a kingfisher? It looks similar, anyways.
I'm fairly interested in ornithology, myself. I'm probably not going to major in it, though. It's more like a hobby.
What's your favorite bird? You said you wanted to be a falconer, so I'm guessing a bird of prey.
I would have responded sooner, but I didn't see a notification. Possibly I was clearing them as you published?
It doesn't matter if it is already being taught. Someone can argue for or against something being instituted even if it's already instituted. It's just like saying "Donald Trump should be President."
Let me save you the trouble, they're probably already teaching it.
All very valid, but I would still like certain things to be taught.
On a slight tangent from this subject. I always see people claim "this and this and this need to be taught in school" or "I never learned this or this or this" and the funny thing is. They always named off something I learned in school. It's like a stigma of sorts. There's problems with schools obviously because we see problems with drop out rates especially in public schools, but people are always so quick to stab at the curriculum and not consider other factors like funding, or methodology behind the curriculum. etc.
I personally think that private schools should be illegal. There's precedent for this and it's ultimately beneficial because it forces EVERYBODY in the community to care about the schools because they don't get to pull their kid out of the system and leave the rest to rot.
I don't know how your high school is however at my high school in northern California we have various career pathways with classes for that pathway. For instance my junior and senior, I'll be taking Mock Trials, Foundations of Law and Public Service, and public service career core.
should be
I'm okay with that. But a curriculum be developed so that the schools have that option.
I think the schools should decide for themselves whether or not to have this class. Some schools can't afford it.
YESS, I want to go to law school and I would loooooooooooooooooooove this
There's some stuff in the terms of legal research and language that high school doesn't cover.
You might be right. I haven't been to law school, so I don't know if there's an appreciable difference between what high schoolers learn and law school. Of course, there's still the question of it it SHOULD...
What makes you think that schools don't already do this? Do you mean local penal codes? Because Federal law is definitely taught in schools and it's not an elective, it's part of history class. They just sneak it in so good that you don't realize it, lol.
If you're talking about in depth semantic bar exam law, then maybe yes?