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Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction : ウィキペディア英語版 | Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction
The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction, also known as CALI, is a 501(c)(3) non-profit consortium of mostly US law schools that conducts applied research and development in the area of computer-mediated legal education. The organization is best known in law schools for CALI Lessons, online interactive tutorials in legal subjects, and CALI Excellence for the Future Awards (CALI Awards), given to the highest scorer in a law school course at many CALI member law schools.〔 Nearly every US law school is a member of CALI. CALI was incorporated in 1982 in the state of Minnesota by the University of Minnesota Law School and Harvard Law School. The cost of membership to CALI is US$7,500 per year for US law schools; free for legal aid organizations, library schools, state and county law librarians; and US$250 per year for law firms, paralegal programs, undergraduate departments, government agencies, individuals, and other organizations.〔(Who Can Join CALI? )〕 ==CALI Lessons== In the early 1980s, CALI set the precedent for creation and use of computer-assisted legal instruction exercises. CALI pioneered pre-packaged, interactive, computer-based legal education materials in text form with its CALI Lessons. CALI Lessons are web-based tutorials on a variety of legal subjects known as CALI Lessons.〔(CALI Lesson Listings )〕 Currently there are over 950 lessons in over 35 law school subjects in CALI's library of lessons.〔 The lessons are free to all CALI member schools' students. Tutorials are authored by law faculty using CALI's lesson authoring software called CALI Author. CALI Author is available to download for free by member school faculty.〔(CALI Author )〕
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