Output list
Conference presentation
Date presented 02/2025
2nd Annual Australian and New Zealand Tort and Compensation Researchers and Teachers Network Symposium - The Future of Tort and Compensation Law: Challenges and Opportunities , 13/02/2025–14/02/2025, University of Auckland Law School and online
This presentation explores strategies to boost student engagement and critical thinking in the study of undergraduate Tort Law. Addressing the challenge of low student engagement in learning and its impact on competency, this presentation offers strategies to build learner confidence and lighten cognitive load to enable deeper learning. Examples from a first-year Australian Torts unit demonstrate practical applications, including workshops, problem-solving activities and the use of generative AI tools. These methods benefit students by providing a familiar learning environment and help educators maximize resources.
Conference presentation
Jurisdictional Error: What even is it?
Date presented 2025
AIAL National Administrative Law Conference: Perspectives In Administrative Law, 31/07/2025–01/08/2025, The University Club of Western Australia, Perth
This paper examines the doctrine of jurisdictional error in Australian administrative law, focusing on its role in judicial review of executive decision-making. Jurisdictional error operates as a doctrinal mechanism for delineating the boundaries of lawful authority and determining the validity of administrative decisions. The paper explores three core dimensions of jurisdictional error: its function in establishing a ground of review, its necessity for the grant of judicial remedies, and its relevance to the interpretation and constitutional validity of privative clauses. Particular emphasis is placed on the High Court’s recent clarification of the materiality threshold in LPDT v Minister for Immigration [2024] HCA 12, which resolves longstanding uncertainty surrounding the meaning, proof, and consequences of material errors. The paper also considers inherently invalidating errors—such as legal unreasonableness, bias, and serious breaches of the hearing rule—and evaluates emerging judicial support for treating such errors as inherently material.
Conference presentation
Engaging students to develop skills for independent learning through polling with EchoVideo
Date presented 09/12/2024
Echo360 Australia and New Zealand Community Conference, 09/12/2024–11/12/2024, Sydney, NSW
Presentation
Date presented 13/09/2024
Leaker & Associates Continuing Professional Development Seminar Series, West Perth
Conference presentation
Strategies for Law Teachers for Promoting and Assessing Student Engagement in Law Units
Date presented 19/07/2024
Western Australian Law Teachers Annual Forum, 19/07/2024, Perth, WA
This presentation will provide guidance on effective strategies for use when teaching Torts. In particular, approaches designed to scaffold student learning and to engage students in learning environments will be examined. Specifically, this presentation will explore the author’s experiences in delivering torts lectures in a way that is more than just ‘information dumping’, but instead engages students and develops their critical thinking skills. Further, novel assessment practices, using interactive tools available in Echo360, which foster students’ ability to effectively time manage and become independent learners, will be discussed. It is hoped that attendees at this presentation will walk away with a few practical tips and tools that they can easily apply to their own teaching practices.
Presentation
Stories (bardip) of Teaching and Learning (katijin) with Echo360
Date presented 12/06/2024
Online presentation to the University of Bradford on behalf of Echo360, 12/06/2024–12/06/2024, Online with University of Bradford, UK
Conference presentation
Date presented 10/06/2024
Approaches to Learning and Teaching in Law and Criminology, Murdoch University, WA
Conference presentation
Activities for Student Engagement
Date presented 10/06/2024
Approaches to Learning and Teaching in Law and Criminology, Murdoch University, WA
Conference presentation
Date presented 15/02/2024
Australian and New Zealand Tort and Compensation Researchers and Teachers Network Symposium, 15/02/2024–16/02/2024, Brisbane, QLD
This presentation will provide guidance on effective strategies for use when teaching Torts. In particular, approaches designed to scaffold student learning and to engage students in learning environments will be examined. Specifically, this presentation will explore the author’s experiences in delivering torts lectures in a way that is more than just ‘information dumping’, but instead engages students and develops their critical thinking skills. Further, novel assessment practices, using interactive tools available in Echo360, which foster students’ ability to effectively time manage and become independent learners, will be discussed. It is hoped that attendees at this presentation will walk away with a few practical tips and tools that they can easily apply to their own teaching practices.
Conference presentation
'Lecturing: More than just "Information Dumping
Date presented 01/02/2023
Western Australia Teaching and Learning Forum. University Life: Being, Becoming, Belonging, 01/02/2023–02/02/2023, Murdoch University, WA
This presentation will provide guidance on effective teaching strategies for use when delivering unit content in lecture settings. Lectures, generally a class the all students enrolled in the unit attend where key content is delivered by an academic addressing the class, have long been a key method for the delivery of unit content to students in a university setting. However, for a lecture to be an effective tool for students’ learning, it must be more than an ‘information dump’. That is, effective lecturing requires more than talking at students, but instead it should be a conversation with students. This presentation will explore the author’s experiences in lecturing in the discipline of law, and will outline a number of strategies used in lectures to foster students’ ability to become independent learners and to develop their critical thinking skills, while still conveying unit content.