This article concerns the value of teaching employed law students about the potency of “impactful legal writing” – legal writing that can have a substantial impact on someone other than the student writer. Much of the employer’s most instructive teaching about impactful legal writing occurs at the beginning of an assignment, rather than solely during review after the student has completed the assignment. This article identifies four ways an employed law student’s impactful writing when fulfilling assignments differs from the effect of students’ academic writing in law school. Each of the four ways enables the employer to deliver practical lessons about impactful legal writing – lessons that can serve present clients and enhance the student’...
Law students engage in various types of “experiential” learning activities while in school, such as ...
The conventional wisdom is that legal writing and academic support go hand-in-hand. Most law schools...
In an age in which writing-software programs tout formative feedback on student papers and advertise...
Professor Abrams authors a column, Writing it Right, in the Journal of the Missouri Bar. In a variet...
While the practice of law is often equated with writing, many law courses involve little or no writi...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
This article begins with the premise that most law students will become professional writers: that i...
As law schools downsize their faculty to offset falling student enrollment, faculty members will lik...
The article advocates including drafting and transactional courses in Legal Writing programs to bett...
The attached article responds to a 2011 article by John Lynch, published in the Journal of Legal Edu...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
To fine-tune legal writing courses to better prepare law students to enter legal practice, Professor...
We now know that many experienced lawyers think newly-minted attorneys “do not write well.”1 Law pro...
The life of the legal writing professor in today’s law schools is a challenging yet rewarding one. O...
(Excerpt) Legal Writing professors, like myself, face the same challenge each new semester: how can ...
Law students engage in various types of “experiential” learning activities while in school, such as ...
The conventional wisdom is that legal writing and academic support go hand-in-hand. Most law schools...
In an age in which writing-software programs tout formative feedback on student papers and advertise...
Professor Abrams authors a column, Writing it Right, in the Journal of the Missouri Bar. In a variet...
While the practice of law is often equated with writing, many law courses involve little or no writi...
This article shows why lawyers must improve their writing skills beyond law school, throughout their...
This article begins with the premise that most law students will become professional writers: that i...
As law schools downsize their faculty to offset falling student enrollment, faculty members will lik...
The article advocates including drafting and transactional courses in Legal Writing programs to bett...
The attached article responds to a 2011 article by John Lynch, published in the Journal of Legal Edu...
This Article, written by the five-person faculty in the legal research and writing program at Wester...
To fine-tune legal writing courses to better prepare law students to enter legal practice, Professor...
We now know that many experienced lawyers think newly-minted attorneys “do not write well.”1 Law pro...
The life of the legal writing professor in today’s law schools is a challenging yet rewarding one. O...
(Excerpt) Legal Writing professors, like myself, face the same challenge each new semester: how can ...
Law students engage in various types of “experiential” learning activities while in school, such as ...
The conventional wisdom is that legal writing and academic support go hand-in-hand. Most law schools...
In an age in which writing-software programs tout formative feedback on student papers and advertise...