krisnelson

I'm currently a graduate student of the history of law and technology at the University of California, San Diego. I also provide law and technology consulting services. Additionally, I'm a non-practicing lawyer and former developer/sysadmin at a biotech non-profit. For more about me and my work, see krisnelson.org or my Google Profile.

Website - Twitter - More Posts


Post title: Gaps Between Teaching and Skills in Law

Authored by: krisnelson

Date posted: Mar 27, 2007

Categorized as: educationlawtechnology

Tagged with:

Alternate URL: /2007/03/gaps-between-teaching-and-skills-in-law.html

Post comment as twitter logo facebook logo
Sort: Newest | Oldest

Very true. Obviously I should develop this thought a bit further, and delve into my recent experiences in more depth.

I did not, for example, mean to suggest that only Lexis/Westlaw are appropriate--for the research project I'm working on right now, at least half of my research is via Google and other freely-accessible resources.

To be honest, mostly several of us simply share our outlines amongst ourselves. (Perhaps my law school is simply more collaborative than others, though.)

Legal writing at this particular school, however, generally prohibits sharing or looking at "exemplar" documents--we are specifically banned from certain resources findable on the Web, and instead encouraged to use print materials first and only then Lexis/Westlaw.

As I said, I'll try to look into my specific situation and analyze it in more depth sometime soon, just to provide another practical perspective.

In all fairness to legal writing instructors, it is true that not all resources are electronic, and knowing how to navigate paper is still important. It's also true that research goes well beyond the walled estates of Lexis and Westlaw and that lawyers also need to know how to research facts, which are increasingly available on the Web (privacy be damned!). Other "legal" research I point to in my study also includes gathering exemplar documents from colleagues or competitors -- a skill you maybe learn in law school by scrounging for outlines?

Ads  

click on x to hide

Share




Related