Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill: A Lifeboat for Students and Law Schools

“Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill: A Lifeboat for Students and Law Schools”

University of Baltimore Law Review, Vol. 39, pp. 175-227, Winter 2009

SARAH VALENTINE, City University of New York – CUNY School of Law

This article argues that current legal research education is dangerously deficient and demonstrates how it can be reconceptualized to become a synergistic first year course that supports the learning of doctrine and legal analysis, as well as necessary research skills in accordance with recent suggestions by the ABA, the authors of the Carnegie Report, and other legal commentators.

Most law schools provide legal research instruction that is not only ineffective in teaching basic research skills but is potentially hazardous to students attempting to learn legal analysis. The ability to electronically search and access law has created a paradigm shift that has affected the very framework of the law as it has been understood and taught for the past one hundred and thirty years. The very act of accessing the law electronically restructures the law itself. It erodes the idea that one can learn the law from the scientific study of readily agreed upon precedent. As the historical understanding of law shifts, the ability to teach students to “think like lawyers” using the structured concepts of the legal system developed in the 1880s, but still relied on by law professors today, begins to collapse.

Creating an excellent legal research course is not necessarily difficult. It requires that legal research be taught as both a fundamental legal skill, requiring analysis and doctrinal knowledge and as a fundamental lawyering skill, integrated into the entire first year curriculum, not merely linked to legal writing. In addition, it must teach information literacy skills and the teaching should be informed with adult learning methodologies. Such a course provides students not only with the necessary research skills for law practice, but assists them in building the conceptual framework necessary for legal analysis.

 

Source:  LSN Legal Writing Vol. 5 No. 3,  02/02/2010

“The Lawyer as Professional Writer”

“The Lawyer as Professional Writer”
by Brandon J. Harrison
62 Arkansas Law Review 725 (2009)

Brandon Harrison starts by writing:

“Lawyers are professional writers.  If you practice law in Arkansas or anywhere else in the world, then you are by any practical definition a professional writer.  Accept it or not, it’s true.”

Harrison goes on to list key thoughts and steps to improve your writing skills as an attorney (and also as a student):

“Develop and hone your professional writer’s voice”

“Legal writing is a serious affair”

“Choose the right words”

“To write well is to think clearly”

“Architecture. Architecture. Architecture.”

“Read good writing”

“Make good writing habitual”

“You are also allowed, indeed encouraged, to be interesting”

“Paint with words”

“Now you know what to do, what will you do it?”

The article closes with advice from William Zinsser (On Writing Well):

“Ultimately….good writing rests on craft and always will.  I don’t know what still newer electronic marvels are waiting just around the corner to make writing twice as easy and twice as fast in the next 25 years.  But I do know they won’t make writing twice as good.  That will still require plain old hard work–clear thinking–and the plain old tools of the English language.”

Significant State Sentencing & Corrections Legislation in 2009

The National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) has posted a convenient and informative table report showing significant state sentencing and corrections legislation enacted January 1, 2009 – December 31, 2009:

Significant State Sentencing and Corrections Legislation in 2009

“Policy information is based on NCSL’s Criminal Justice Program enactment research, powered by Statenet” (a legislative and regulatory information service).

See also Session Law and Bill Citations for Significant State Sentencing and Corrections Legislation in 2009 for specific session law and bill citations.

Hat tip to Docuticker.com.