Difference between revisions of "Theodore Dwight"

From WikiCU
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 6: Line 6:
  
 
Dwight stayed on until [[1891]], when the [[trustees]] foisted the case method of teaching on him. Dwight had developed his own, eponymous method, which emphasized memorization of treatises and frequent moot courts, in contrast to the parsing of cases. In protest over the rejection of his method, Dwight and other faculty left to found New York Law School. Today, the case method is taught even there.
 
Dwight stayed on until [[1891]], when the [[trustees]] foisted the case method of teaching on him. Dwight had developed his own, eponymous method, which emphasized memorization of treatises and frequent moot courts, in contrast to the parsing of cases. In protest over the rejection of his method, Dwight and other faculty left to found New York Law School. Today, the case method is taught even there.
 +
 +
Dwight is honored on campus by the north [[Pylon]] on the [[116th Street]] [[Gates]] at [[Amsterdam Avenue]], which was installed and inscribed on order of the [[Trustees]] in [[1932]].
  
 
[[Category:Deans of the Law School|Dwight]]
 
[[Category:Deans of the Law School|Dwight]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Dwight]]
 
[[Category:Former professors|Dwight]]
 
[[Category:Law professors|Dwight]]
 
[[Category:Law professors|Dwight]]

Revision as of 15:17, 19 February 2008

See also Wikipedia's article about "Theodore William Dwight".

Theodore William Dwight was the first dean of the law school.

He first came to Columbia in 1858, the first law professor since the departure of James Kent in 1798. He remained the sole instructor in the law department until it was expanded into a formal law school in 1873, at which point he became dean.

Dwight stayed on until 1891, when the trustees foisted the case method of teaching on him. Dwight had developed his own, eponymous method, which emphasized memorization of treatises and frequent moot courts, in contrast to the parsing of cases. In protest over the rejection of his method, Dwight and other faculty left to found New York Law School. Today, the case method is taught even there.

Dwight is honored on campus by the north Pylon on the 116th Street Gates at Amsterdam Avenue, which was installed and inscribed on order of the Trustees in 1932.