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Introducing First-Year Legal Writing Students to the Multifaceted Nature of Facts

Introduction

Each Fall, legal writing professors introduce students to the structure and format of the interoffice memo. The memo, of course, is the product we ask students to create to show their mastery of producing a written legal analysis. Before the Discussion section of the interoffice memo, however—the section in which that analysis is communicated—there is the Statement of Facts. I have not spent much time instructing students on the Statement of Facts beyond providing them with strategies for organizing facts clearly and effectively.

Making Students Practice Ready: Standalone Email and Summary Email Simulations

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Learning to Begin Again: The Rewrite in First Year Legal Writing

We all know the mantra: writing is rewriting. When we teach students how to write, we help them develop an editorial sensibility, as much as a compositional one. Yet in an era where students read and write less (except for texting, of course) and increasingly depend on generative AI, revision is harder to master. If students struggle with how to even begin writing, how can we expect they will know how to “begin again”?

Avoid Vague Resolutions: Help Students Commit to Reflection, Revision, and Smart Goals

Introduction

While my Spring semester of Lawyering Skills primarily focuses on transitioning from predictive to persuasive analysis, my first unit of the year is entitled “Reflection and Revision.” I take advantage of the fact that we have just “celebrated” the New Year’s holiday,[1] when many students are already reflecting and making resolutions. First, I ask students to reflect on their progress thus far in the course, as well as in law school.

Teaching After Midnight: Lessons From My First Year Directing a Fully Online Legal Writing Program

In the summer of 2025, I was given the opportunity to create a new legal writing curriculum for the University of Hawaiʻi Richardson School of Law’s fully online J.D. program. In addition to developing materials used in the 1L Lawyering Fundamentals courses, I now teach in the program. The process has proven to be the most rewarding in my 23 years as a legal writing professor.

Three Ways to Energize Your LRW Classroom

Introduction

I have taught legal writing for a long time. Some things I “got right” early on, and I use those teaching approaches perennially. Some things I have created and improved and tweaked over time. And some things I create in the moment to make class more effective for a specific group of students.[1] What follows are three recent “in the moment” teaching tips that I now share with you.

Critique v. Composition: Rethinking Memos, Motions, and Briefs in the Era of AI and the NextGen Bar

Published: December 2025

Legal writing professors face a pivotal moment in legal education. The introduction of the NextGen bar exam and the rise of generative AI are fundamentally changing how we need to prepare our students for legal practice. While these two developments might seem distinct, they both demand the same core competency: the need to strengthen critical reading and evaluation skills.