Students in legal research classes or workshops often struggle with unlearning. Since most students have done some type of research during their undergraduate education, we are asking them to do something (at least somewhat) familiar in a new way. When students are try to unlearn something, they will understandably stumble over old habits. After all, if they've always done research a certain way, like tossing search terms into a Google-like search box, it's become automatic for them, a task they do without any conscious thinking. When we ask them to use an index or Table of Contents or another tool instead, it takes conscious effort for them not to resort to their ingrained research habits. In fact, it's actually more challenging to make a conscious effort to change an existing habit than it is to make a conscious effort to do something new.[1] Their previous processes have already become streamlined in their brain and building new structures based on new learning is
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