Carol L. Wallinger is an expert in workers' compensation, insurance, estate
planning, and elder law and teaches Legal Writing to first-year and
upper-level students.
She worked as an attorney in both Pennsylvania and
New Jersey and is a founding member of the board of directors of the
American Association of Law Schools Balance in Legal Education
section. Professor Wallinger joined the Rutgers School of Law-Camden faculty in 2001, and
since then has taught Legal Writing to both first-year and upper-level
law students. She also has taught Workers' Compensation Law. Before
joining the faculty, she taught Legal Writing at Temple University.
Professor Wallinger earned a B.S. in nursing from Rutgers-Newark, cum
laude, and a J.D. and Estate Planning Certificate from Temple
University School of Law. Between 1989 and 2001, she practiced law, representing both employees and employers in Pennsylvania
and New Jersey workers' compensation and insurance defense matters. She
also practiced Social Security, estate planning, and elder law.
Professor Wallinger's research focuses on applying self-determination
theory, an empirically validated psychology theory, to reimagine the
law school curriculum. Self-determination theory has proven that in
order for humans to be motivated, and be successful, they should
regularly experience autonomy, competence, and relatedness to others.
Preliminary research by Sheldon and Krieger has shown that providing law
students with autonomy support increases their adoption of professional
values, and their academic performance, including performance on the
bar exam. However, few law schools have implemented this research.
Professor Wallinger's work concentrates on disseminating information
about self-determination theory, and on developing autonomy support
techniques specifically designed for the law school curriculum. In 2007,
her research won a competitive scholarship from the Association of
Legal Writing Directors.
On the national level, in 2007 Professor Wallinger was a founding
member of the board of directors of the American Association of Law
Schools' Balance in Legal Education section. She also is the
national chair of the Idea Bank Committee for the Legal Writing
Institute, an organization whose members include law professors, judges,
and practitioners. Rutgers Law School in Camden is now the home of this national
teaching database.