Legal studies professor Sam Hodge awarded Stauffer Award for faculty service
Most of the 15,000 students Sam Hodge has taught in his 34 years at Temple probably know him only as the professor who can make dry court cases into theater.
|
![]() Photo by George Bilyk
Hodge
|
The award honors outstanding faculty service. One can’t help but be impressed by the sheer volume of Hodge’s accomplishments. As chair of the legal studies department for 26 years, he is one of the longest-running chairs of any department at Temple. Anyone who has taken a legal studies class at the Fox School has most likely been taught by a professor hired by Hodge. In 1990, he won Temple’s Great Teacher Award.
|
For Hodge, the center was a fitting undertaking. His course, “Law and Society,” isn’t just any introductory-level class — it’s one of the largest classes at Temple. More than 600 students a class learn about complex court cases through Hodge’s innovative methods, such as creating a theatrical family that finds its way in various legal troubles over the duration of the course, thus providing students with a streamlined presentation of highly complex real-life scenarios. “I stepped up years ago to teach freshmen. I’ll do anything to convey the material,” said Hodge, whose unique methods have been profiled by The New York Times and the Chronicle of Higher Education. “I did it to keep people’s interest. It gives a cohesiveness throughout the semester.”
|