Week NUMBER NINE: Chapter 12
"Criminal Law and Young People"
"Criminal Law and Young People"
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Week NUMBER EIGHT: Chapter 11
"Sentencing and the Correctional System"
"Sentencing and the Correctional System"
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* Videos from Zofia's slides
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Week NUMBER SEVEN: Chapter 10 "Defences for the Accused"
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Week NUMBER SIX: Summative Test (no extra resources)
Week NUMBER FIVE: Chapter 9 "The Criminal Court System"
Chapter 9 Slides | |
File Size: | 10914 kb |
File Type: | pptx |
Week NUMBER FOUR: Chapter 8 "Criminal Offences"
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If you want access to the orinal files, go to the digital databases, and select Canadian Points of Views
login: langley password: langley35 You will need to search of the topics, but they should come up & have the option of reading the material to you. |
Week NUMBER THREE: Chapter 7 "Investigation and Arrest"
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Week NUMBER TWO: Chapter 6 "The Nature of Crime"
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Week NUMBER ONE: Introduction to Evidence
You will be reading a couple documents from a real case, you will determine if there is enough evidence for a verdict.
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Key things to note: all of the instructions are available on the first page of the website, or on the file I have loaded first.
There are two worksheets to help you organize your evidence as you read the testimonies.
At the very bottom of the page are the individual pieces of evidence you will be sorting though.
Start with the secondary documents. Then the newspaper articles, then the testimonies. Read the Judges bench notes last-- they are the casual observations of the judge during the trial, so they line up with some of the other documents you will have already read.
You don't have to do it alone, you can divide and conquer with peers and discuss the case-- but you have to submit individual conclusions.
You will submit your final determination on guilt and your justification for your position (see the bottom of last worksheet)
There are two worksheets to help you organize your evidence as you read the testimonies.
At the very bottom of the page are the individual pieces of evidence you will be sorting though.
Start with the secondary documents. Then the newspaper articles, then the testimonies. Read the Judges bench notes last-- they are the casual observations of the judge during the trial, so they line up with some of the other documents you will have already read.
You don't have to do it alone, you can divide and conquer with peers and discuss the case-- but you have to submit individual conclusions.
You will submit your final determination on guilt and your justification for your position (see the bottom of last worksheet)