MiuMiu said:
On an unrelated note my law school (my whole uni infact) did away with the bell curve awhile ago.
How do you know that the bell cure is not used? That is, does the official marking policies of the institution
prohibit the scaling of marks to fit into pre-determined statistical models, or do the policies just not mention it? It's all very interesting, and I'd like to know more.
On another point, more related to the thread, I quite like the text, but I think the editors need lessons in pleasing book design. Naughty Federation Press for publishing something so poorly laid-out; they hit the mark with
Cases on Torts but we so disappointing with
Criminal Laws.
Edit: Naturally, nothing comes close to Butterworth's edition of Zines'
The High Court and the Constitution for sheer typographical and otherwise bibliographic elegance. Not my personal opinion; rather, I feel it is an indisputable fact. Legal publishing should excite and awe. Such books should be as pleasurable a reading diversion as Walt Whitman's poetry and yet have the aura and majesty of a Lincoln address; the elegance and eloquence of the Song of Solomon and yet the power and permanence of the Ten Commandments; they should both popularise and sequester -- in the way postmodernism is represented in American culture simultaneously by both the trashy
PoMo of Las Vegas and the highbrow capital-p Postmodernism of the Museum of Modern Art, but in a unified, a beautiful, a sublime way.