Archive for November, 2008

Nov 19 2008

Whither Clinical Education?

Clinical Education, RIP. I hope that this hypothetical epitaph spurs clinicians to re-imagine an educational methodology that seems to have seriously lost its way. Most clinical courses fail to enhance students’ lawyering skills in any significant way. The reason is that clinicians focus courses on narrow types of legal problems rather than on skills chosen because they are complex and therefore worthy of analysis and training in law school. Most “innovative” clinical courses consist only of pouring the same wine into differently shaped bottles, as clinicians apply the same methodology to different types of legal problems. Not surprisingly, clinicians continue to grapple with security-of-employment issues.

The rudderless nature of clinical legal education is nowhere more apparent than in clinicians’ choices of conference topics. (Unlike other AALS sections, clinicians have persuaded the AALS that they are entitled to a conference or workshop every year.) You might think that since clinical education focuses on legal problems of the poor and disenfranchised, conferences would customarily be devoted to scholarship concerning structural problems that plague our system of justice and distribution of legal services. But this is decidedly not what happens. Continue Reading »

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Nov 14 2008

Stand up! Stand Up!

Published by under Advice

Good posture is a critical aspect of effective communications.  How you stand, with your shoulders back, stomach in, and torse erect but not rigid, will affect both the impression you leave and the quality of sound you produce.  When you slouch, your airways are crunched and you won’t be able to use the air you breathe to insure full, rich, sound.

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Nov 04 2008

Law school dress codes

Published by under Miscellaneous

Perhaps lawyers (and law students) should learn from the uniforms worn by professionals who consistently rank the highest in public opinion polls. Asked questions such as “which professionals do you most trust?” respondents typically name nurses, firefighters, doctors, pharmacists and airline pilots. Just imagine how much credibility lawyers would have with jurors during closing arguments if they scrapped their 3 piece suits in favor of white coats with stethoscopes or bright yellow fire retardant suits with hatchets.

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