218 results on '"Legal composition -- Study and teaching"'
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2. Building an evolving method and materials for teaching legal writing in large classes
3. Now I see: redefining the post-grade student conference as process and substance assessment.
4. Luncheon speech.
5. Afternoon session.
6. Morning session.
7. Reflections, remembrances, and mimesis: one person's view of the significance of the 25th anniversary of the founding of the Legal Writing Institute.
8. Redirecting the scope of first-year writing courses: toward a new paradigm of teaching legal writing.
9. Phenomenology of error in legal writing.
10. Teaching legal writing after a thirty-year respite: no country for old men?
11. What's on your playlist? The power of podcasts as a pedagogical tool.
12. The clinical year.
13. Rhetoric counts: what we should teach when we teach Posner.
14. A methodology for mentoring writing in law practice: using textual clues to provide effective and efficient feedback.
15. Teaching in practice: legal writing faculty as expert writing consultants to law firms.
16. Using feedback theory to help novice legal writers develop expertise.
17. A methodology for mentoring writing in law practice: using textual clues to provide effective and efficient feedback.
18. Real collaborative context: opinion writing and the appellate process.
19. Finding a happy medium: teaching contract creation in the first year.
20. When theory met practice: teaching tort law from a practical perspective.
21. Transactional skills training: opinion letters.
22. Incorporating transactional skills training into first-year doctrinal courses.
23. Transactional skills training: contract drafting - beyond the basics.
24. Teaching transactional skills in first-year writing courses.
25. You too can create a simulation exercise (or even a course).
26. Pedagogic techniques: using collaborative writing technology to teach contract drafting.
27. Pedagogic techniques: multi-disciplinary courses, annotated document review, collaborative work & large groups.
28. Tapping the human adaptive origins of storytelling by requiring legal writing students to read a novel in order to appreciate how character, setting, plot, theme, and tone (CSPTT) are as important as IRAC.
29. Did your legal writing professor go to harvard? The credentials of legal writing faculty at hiring time.
30. Writing to learn law and writing in law: an intellectual property illustration. .
31. Imaging the law-trained reader: the faulty description of the audience in legal writing textbooks.
32. Survey of cooperation among clinical, pro bono, externship, and legal writing faculty.
33. So near and yet so far: dreams of collaboration between clinical and legal writing programs.
34. Building bridges: a call for greater collaboration between legal writing and clinical professors.
35. Using actual legal work to teach legal research and writing.
36. Transactional law in the required legal writing curriculum: an empirical study of the forgotten future business lawyer.
37. Triage in the trenches of the legal writing course: the theory and methodology of analytical critique.
38. MacCrate (in)action: the case for enhancing the upper-level writing requirements in law schools.
39. Brush up your Aristotle.
40. Philosophy v. rhetoric in legal education: understanding the schism between doctrinal and legal writing faculty.
41. Neither dead nor dangerous: postmodernism and the teaching of legal writing.
42. Analyze, this: using taxonomies to 'scaffold' students' legal thinking and writing skills.
43. Legal clinics and the better trained lawyer (redux): a history of clinical education at Northwestern.
44. Increased importance of legal writing in the era of 'the vanishing trial'.
45. You've got rhythm: curriculum planning and teaching rhythm at work in the legal writing classroom.
46. 'I see and I rememer: I do and I understand': teaching fundamental structure in legal writing through the use of samples.
47. Students are (re)visionaries: or, revision, revision, revision.
48. The 'reasonable zone of right answers': analytical feedback on student writing.
49. Legal writing and academic support: timing is everything.
50. Giving up grammar and dumping Derrida: how to make legal writing a respected part of the law school curriculum.
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