Workshop in Briefcraft

Course Information

Course Number
L6674-LEC
Curriculum Level
Upperclass
Areas of Study
Writing, Research, and Assistantships
Type
Moot Court
Additional Attributes
Experiential Credit

Section 001 Information

Instructor

Section Description

Permission of instructor required. 2 credits.

Graded CR/F.

Major or minor writing credit available.

This course is closed to LL.M. students.

Required for students who have been selected and are registered as Moot Court Student Editors for the first-year moot court program under L6681. Open to other students with special permission of the instructor.

Student editors for the Foundation Moot Court program, working in teams of two or four, are responsible for designing an appellate advocacy problem to be used by first-year students in the spring semester and for drafting a bench memorandum and record. Student editors for the approved intermural Moot Court programs are responsible for drafting a bench memorandum. In the spring each editor supervises approximately 8-10 students in the research and writing of appellate briefs.

In the workshop, students build upon the writing and research skills and the knowledge of appellate advocacy that they gained in the first year. They receive intensive instruction in developing effective Moot Court problems, mentoring first-year students, and editing written work. Students further develop the skills of clear and effective advocacy through writing assignments related to their moot court problems. Students edit each other's written work under the guidance of the instructor.

Editors research and write bench memoranda and records (or bench memoranda only for the intermural programs) for their problems and submit these at the end of the fall term. They must revise these in the spring term in response to feedback provided by the instructor.

School Year & Semester
Fall 2021
Location
JGH 103
Schedule
Class meets on
  • Wednesday
4:20 pm - 6:10 pm
Points
2
Method of Evaluation
Paper
J.D Writing Credit?
Minor (upon consultation)
Major (only upon consultation)

Learning Outcomes

Primary
  • Improvement of skills in legal research and writing generally and appellate advocacy specifically
  • Feeling of community within classroom to facilitate discussion
  • Development of interesting, balanced, manageable two-issue problem for use by first-year students in spring semester Moot Court program; research and writing of bench memorandum and record for problem
  • Improvement of collaborative skills
  • Development of editing and mentoring skills to prepare for work with first-year students in spring semester
  • Preparation for work as teaching fellows in spring semester Legal Practice Workshop

Course Limitations

Instructor Pre-requisites
None
Instructor Co-Requisites
None
Recommended Courses
None
Other Limitations
Permission of instructor required