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One-Day Workshops 2018

Eleven schools across the country | November 30 - December 8, 2018

$45 for general attendees, $25 for presenters and host school attendees

One-Day Workshops 2018

 

   The 2018 LWI One-Day Workshops Will Be Here Soon!

The One-Day Workshop Committee is pleased to announce that we have eleven Workshops on the schedule for this November and December.  Below are the sites, dates, and themes, listed alphabetically by date. 

 

School:           University of Akron School of Law

Date:               Friday, November 30th

Theme:           “Moving from the Brief to the Podium: Teaching Oral Advocacy.”

How do you teach oral advocacy skills in your first-year writing course, appellate advocacy course, or moot court program? Do you have particular videos you use? Do you start preparing students for oral arguments before they submit their briefs? Do you have them practice their arguments with you or other students? Do you incorporate technology, such as video recording student arguments? We want you to share whatever, tips, tricks, or techniques you use to make your students better oral advocates. We also plan to use part of the lunch hour to have an informal discussion about innovation in the LRW classroom, tentatively titled “What I Tried in Class That Didn’t Work and What I Learned From It.”  

 

School:           Chapman University Fowler School of Law

Date:               Friday, November 30th

Theme:           “#amwriting: Reaching the Next Generation of Legal Writers”

Generation Z – the generation after the Millennials-- is about to arrive in our law school classrooms. Chapman University Fowler School of Law invites presentations addressing how this generation of learners with be different from and similar to past law student cohorts, how best to reach these students, and how to prepare them for the current landscape of legal practice. Presentations might address the following: teaching Generation Z; the needs of current law practitioners and judges, and how law schools can better prepare students to meet those needs; alternatives to the traditional office memo assignment (or arguments for retaining it); the benefits (and pitfalls) of social media for law students and lawyers; reaching distracted readers and students – adjusting for the rise in digital readership; how AI affects (or will affect) legal research and instruction; helping students cultivate a professional identity; and promoting student wellness and growth mindsets.

 

School:           Loyola University New Orleans

Date:               Friday, November 30th

Theme:           “‘Help Me Help You’:  Improving Communication Between the Bench, the Bar, and the Academy to Produce Practice-Ready Legal Writers” 

As teachers of legal writing, we strive to prepare students for the realities of the real world and a real-life law practice. Some principles of research, reasoning, writing, and advocacy remain constant over time; others present new challenges. Practitioners and judges can help us adapt to prepare students for today's legal world. This One Day Workshop will feature individual and panel presentations, primarily focused on how to best prepare our students for today’s legal world. Some suggested topics that you might explore include the following. These are just some ideas. Please be creative.

  • Effective ways to gather information from the bench and/or bar regarding what they value in new hires and what they are seeing in new hires (both positive and negative)
  • Collaborations into which you have entered with bench and bar members or clinic professors, and lessons learned from those collaborations 
  • If you are a judge or practicing lawyer, what you would like to see from recent law school graduates entering your organization
  • Pitfalls of soliciting input from the bench and bar
  • How do lawyers really research in 2018 and beyond?

All proposals that fit within our general theme are welcome.

 

School:           Mississippi College of Law

Date:               Friday, November 30th

Theme:           “Teaching and Assessing Professional Communication Skills in Law School”

Possible topics could include:

  • Exploring models for evaluating and assessing students' communication skills;
  • Translating the language of assessment (e.g., triangulation, inter-rater reliability) and determining what works for your program;
  • Grading and assessment processes: how they differ and how they overlap;
  • Using rubrics for grading and assessing: what works and doesn't work?  (e.g., can you use the same rubric to grade an exercise and to satisfy both the ABA Outcome-Measures Standard and the Formative-Assessment Standard?);
  • Top concerns (and solutions) about formative assessments in legal communication courses;  
  • Teaching and assessing soft skills in legal communication courses;
  • Analyzing and using assessment data to improve our teaching methods:  some samples;
  • How to effectively implement e-portfolios into the legal writing curriculum, or how to use e-portfolios to assess skills development and assist students to become more reflective learners;
  • What constitutes success?  Are bright-line accreditation benchmarks required?  Should faculties set "target levels" of achievement to define expectations? What other options do we have?;
  • Using technology to facilitate teaching and assessing students' communication skills;
  • Ways to ensure that time spent on assessments doesn't take away Time from your teaching, scholarship, and service;
  • Assessment tools and resources;
  • Grappling with the assessment process:  lessons learned the hard way. 

 

School:           University of Oregon School of Law

Date:               Friday, November 30th

Theme:           “Teaching Scholars”

Our theme is broad to appeal to anyone who wants to attend, and it has several meanings: * We are scholars and teachers, so the literature in our discipline informs what we do in the classroom.* We teach students to write scholarship and practice materials, though we don’t discuss the former as much as the latter.* We need to be more intentional about teaching our newer colleagues to become scholars, which will boost their careers.

 

School:           University of Pittsburgh

Date:               Friday, November 30, 2018

Theme:           “Leveraging Technology in the Legal Writing Classroom to Prepare Law Students for Practice” 

For our workshop, we encourage a broad range of topics examining the use of technology and the decision not to use technology in the legal writing classroom. Some potential topic ideas could include:

  • How technology can be used to advance legal writing skills;
  • Flipping the legal writing classroom;
  • Artificial intelligence in teaching legal research;
  • Addressing students’ use of technology in the classroom;
  • Why blackboard and chalk are still the best way to reach our students.

 

School:           University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Date:               Saturday, December 1st

Theme:           “Legal Writing Across the Curriculum: Opportunities for Students to Write More Over Three Years of Law School”  

Legal writing is one of the most important tools in a lawyer’s arsenal.  Incorporating legal writing throughout the three years of law school will help sharpen a student’s skill set to help students become practice ready.  While traditional upper-level writing courses afford students this practical understanding, not all students have the opportunity to take these courses.  However, courses offered throughout the curriculum may afford unique opportunities for students to put their writing skills to work.  This One-Day workshop will focus on these opportunities.

Presentations might address the following:

  • Designing an upper level writing class;
  • Unique writing exercises in upper level writing classes;
  • Writing exercises incorporated in a casebook oriented/doctrinal class;
  • Unique upper level writing classes that allow students the opportunity to apply the law through writing;
  • Evaluating writing projects in casebook-oriented classes—best practices;
  • How to make the exercises meaningful while giving efficient feedback

 

School:           University of Tennessee College of Law

Date:               Saturday, December 1st (with reception Friday, November 30th)

Theme:           “Whose Job Is It Anyway: Examining the Role of Legal Writing and Academic Support in Bar Preparation”

This year LWI created the inaugural LWI Academic Support committee. Now is a great time to reexamine the relationship between academic support, legal writing and the bar exam. Most legal writing and academic support teachers agree that preparation for the bar exam starts at the onset of law school and is a collaborative effort of faculty, staff, administrators and students. Presentations at this workshop will answer questions like: In addition to the MPT, what experiential assessments are legal writing and academic support using to bolster student success? What skills are transferable to bar exam success? How can academic support and legal writing collaborate to improve student success?

 

School:           Northeastern University School of Law

Date:               Friday, December 7th

Theme:           “Increasing Critical Engagement - How to Get Students to Get Serious” 

Increasingly, law schools, and law students, are recognizing the importance of skills teaching.  Law students in particular understand the critical role that skills learning has in their law school career, as preparation for co-ops, internships, and post-graduate employment.  But the practice of law is evolving, and the student body is changing.  How can we adapt our teaching to meet these new demands?  

What innovations can we adopt to make our teaching even stronger, so that students stay engaged in their learning?

We encourage applicants to think broadly about the theme.  Possible proposal topics include teaching students how to engage in self-reflection and self-evaluation, developing interactive teaching exercises, expanding students’ professional development, devising innovations in critique and feedback, and incorporating social justice issues into LRW pedagogy.

 

School:           University of Louisville

Date:               Saturday, December 8th

Theme:           “Have Mercy: Showing Empathy for your Audience”

This theme inevitably encompasses a wide variety of ideas, but the focus is on empathy and thinking of our audience.  This can include teaching students to be mindful of their readers, placing the student experience in the forefront of our teaching, and even incorporating client- centered or social justice concepts into our classes.  Proposals can include full panel programs or single presentations that work with our theme.

 

School:           Ave Maria School of Law

Date:               Friday, December 14th

Theme:           “Elevating Your Program to the Next Level”

This conference will focus on meeting the challenges that face legal writing faculty in engaging millennial learners by enhancing critical reading and thinking skills, incorporating experiential learning opportunities in the classroom to comply with ABA requirements, the effective use of technology, and using scholarship to elevate your program.

____________________________________________________________________________________________

The Committee is currently accepting proposals for presentations at the Workshops. To submit a presentation proposal, please email your proposal to Laura Graham at grahamlp@wfu.edu by September 7, 2018. Your proposal should contain (1) the name(s) and email address(es) of the presenter(s); (2) the name and email address of the contact person, if your presentation is a group or panel presentation; (3) the title of the presentation; (4) a brief description of the presentation (one paragraph is fine), and (5) your top three law school site choices, in order of preference. Also, if you are interested in presenting at more than one school, please let us know that, too.

After September 7, the host schools will select the presenters they want to invite to their workshops, and then we will post more detailed information about each workshop on the LWI site and let you know how you can register to attend a Workshop.

Meanwhile, if you have any questions about presenting at a One-Day Workshop or about a school’s theme, etc., please email Carolyn Williams at cvwilliams@email.arizona.edu or Laura Graham at grahamlp@wfu.edu for more information. We look forward to reading your proposals and seeing you in late fall!

 

The LWI One-Day Workshop Committee

  • Meredith Stange, Northern Illinois (co-chair)
  • Laura Graham, Wake Forest (co-chair)
  • Wendy-Adele Humphrey, Texas Tech
  • Hillary Reed, Houston
  • Carolyn Williams, Arizona

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