Inspiring Great Writing in Law Students

Click Here for a Printable PDF

By Antonette Barilla*

Law schools, focused as they are on providing intense, specialized, professional training, might legitimately be accused of stifling the creativity and innovation that define brilliant writing. When it comes to law school writing, there are blueprints for nearly every type of composition—from case briefing and exam writing, to the design of legal memoranda and the outline for an oral argument. And while professors are experts at teaching students the requisite formulas, we, as practitioners and legal writing professionals, are not as adept at facilitating the development of good writing—writing that is unfettered by artificial legal formulas. We forget that anytime one writes, even in a personal capacity, they provide some measure into their competence as a professional. The intended audience of a letter to the editor, a blog post, holiday cards, hotel reviews, business proposals, letters to friends, etc. will develop an opinion about the writer’s skill, cleverness, values, and identity. Each time a law student or attorney commits his or her thoughts to words, they open their professional reputation to some level of evaluation.

Continue reading “Inspiring Great Writing in Law Students”

Fast Track Your Mindset: Engineering Confidence and Streamlining Feedback for Full Steam Success in Legal Practice

Click Here for a Printable PDF

by Deborah L. Borman*

Students face two obstacles to success in law school and later in legal practice: reduced confidence and an inability to receive feedback. Feeling insecure and having trouble internalizing feedback are interrelated emotional responses that can derail both the legal education experience and a subsequent career in the law. Continue reading “Fast Track Your Mindset: Engineering Confidence and Streamlining Feedback for Full Steam Success in Legal Practice”

A Rhetorical Exercise: Persuasive Word Choice*

Click here for a printable PDF

by Stephen E. Smith**

“The choice of appropriate and striking words has a marvellous power and an enthralling charm for the reader.”[1]

Persuasion can spring from many fonts: a sound argument, a sympathetic set of facts, even the good grooming of an oral advocate.[2] In writing a legal brief, word choice is an important persuasion tool. Through word choice, legal writers may characterize a party’s behavior, clarify a scene, or recast an interaction. For example, it is very different to describe an utterance as “offering a choice,” or “issuing an ultimatum.”

Continue reading “A Rhetorical Exercise: Persuasive Word Choice*”

Offering and Teaching Mindfulness in Law Schools

Click here for a printable PDF

By Tim Iglesias*

Mindfulness is a form of meditation in which a person focuses her attention on her breathing to anchor herself in the present moment.[1] When thoughts,feelings, or anything else attracts her attention away from the breath, she might briefly acknowledge what it was that took her attention and then, without any judgment, return her attention to her breathing.

Over the last decade, mindfulness courses have proliferated in law schools nationwide.[2] Now is an appropriate time to ask two interconnected questions: First, what are we teaching in these courses? And second, how do we attract students to these courses?

Continue reading “Offering and Teaching Mindfulness in Law Schools”