Supporting transition to law school and student well-being: The role of professional legal identity
Abstract
The empirically established decline in law student well-being during the first year of law school is a red-flagged imprimatur for first year curriculum change. This article suggests that by engaging law students with the concept of a positive professional identity, student engagement and intrinsic motivation will increase because they are working towards a career goal that has meaning and purpose. Law school is a time of professional transformation and the legal academy can take steps to ensure that this transformation is inculcated with positive messages. Literature from the fields of law and psychology is analysed in this article, to explain how a positive conception of the legal profession (and a student’s future role within it) can increase a student’s psychological well-being – at law school and beyond.
						Published
					
					
						Jul 29, 2013
					
				
								How to Cite
							
							
															FIELD, Rachael; 						DUFFY, James; 						HUGGINS, Anna.
 Supporting transition to law school and student well-being: The role of professional legal identity.
The International Journal of the First Year in Higher Education, [S.l.], v. 4, n. 2, p. 15-25, july 2013.
ISSN 1838-2959.
Available at: <http://fyhejournal.com/article/view/167>. Date accessed: 16 aug. 2018.
doi: https://doi.org/10.5204/intjfyhe.v4i2.167. 
							
						
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					Keywords
						student engagement; professional identity; legal education; psychological well-being
					
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