Developing Skepticism as a Skill – Some quick thoughts on why academic support should be thought of as separate from bar preparation/bar support

This summer’s bar exam with its uncertain timing, combined with the impact of the pandemic and the growing movement to transform parts of the legal system, brings to the fore the impact of the bar exam on legal education.  The pandemic itself has adversely affected student learning generally.  The pandemic’s adverse impact exacerbates the problems associated with teaching to the bar exam, which can best be described as when a law school directs its focus to a narrow range of subjects. This narrow focus subsequently influences student learning and choice as well as the type of support we provide to students. If for no other reasons than these, academic support ought not to have as its focus helping students pass the bar; that bar exam focus should belong more uniquely to bar prep faculty.

The bar exam is an enormous hurdle, no doubt.  Through hundreds of questions over two or three days, it tests one’s basic knowledge of black letter law of roughly fourteen subjects or seven topics and pages of sub-topics depending on how you count.[i]  Generally, those MBE subjects include contracts and sales; constitutional law; criminal law and procedure; civil procedure; evidence; real property, and torts. Any jurisdiction that offers the MEE has essay questions that cover, in addition to the MBE topics, Conflict of Laws, Family Law, Trusts & Estates, and Uniform Commercial Code.[ii] Notice that these topics are fairly related and tend to cluster, though not entirely, in the general commercial law and litigation area with some exceptions. Of course, each state may have its own requirements. And, for students, preparing for this exam can be a costly undertaking. Multiple vendors provide preparatory materials, advertised online at between $1900 and $4200. Because passing this exam is still the door (in most cases) to licensure, supporting student success on the bar exam is obviously vital.[iii]

Given that the bar exam has been offered in some form from as early as 1738 (in Delaware) and in its present form by the NCBE since 1972, and that the topics tested by the bar examiners have been consistent since that time,[iv] my bar prep colleagues have essentially committed to memory all of that material – so much so, that at any given time, they can say to our students: “that topic has been assessed on every bar exam since 2000,” or “you’ll need this for the bar exam,” or “you don’t need to know that for the exam.” Those colleagues are expert in approaching the bar exam and provide tools to help students approach bar exam essay questions – both reading them and writing responses, and ways to approach multiple choice questions.  And, one of the most often heard suggestions for studying is to keep taking the practice questions.

But, there are other areas of law: Administrative Law, Environmental Law, Immigration Law, Mental Health Law, Bankruptcy Law, Indigenous Peoples Law, Disability Law, Poverty Law, Pensions and Benefits Law, Maritime Law, International Law, Intellectual Property Law, Copyright Law, Cyber/Cybersecurity Law, Identity Justice Law, Health Law, Employment Law, Voting Law, and Tax Law, to name just a few, that are not tested on the bar exam in most states. And now, there is this extraordinary transformational legal change in which we find ourselves. This long list of topics and current events beg the question(s!): ‘If we focus our attention on preparing[v] students for the bar exam, this exam with this same set of topics,[vi] what are we, as members of the legal profession saying about the law?[vii]  If our best advice is to keep taking the practice questions that lead to the same result, what are we saying about the law?  About the importance of other areas of law?’

I am confident my bar prep colleagues are doing excellent work preparing students for the bar exam.  I recognize the examiners have added practice components. I’m not saying we should add questions, though, law has developed significantly over the decades; and, I am not arguing we should not have a bar exam – although given the responses of various jurisdictions to the pandemic, there’s an argument to be made.[viii]

Putting aside whether a future bar exam should look like the one given now, what I am saying is that academic support should not focus on a bar exam. Actually, most academic support situations arise in one’s first year of law school – far distant from the bar exam. Academic support can help students learn to be skeptical and not accept the given response, to sit with ambiguity (not the ‘answer’), and to write not only proof of a conclusion, but also to write toward a developing understanding. Someone who provides academic support for law school success should not address the idea of whether a student would need something for the singular purpose of the bar exam. Instead, the person who provides academic support should encourage the student to do and learn more, both for their time during law school and after.

I recognize that many faculty teaching doctrinal courses take upon themselves the task of helping students learn the complexity of laws as well as skills needed to succeed in law school. In recognition of both the need for these skills and difficulty of incorporating them into the 1L, Harvard Law has developed the Zero-L program that introduces students to the framework around law as well as other basic skills[ix]. Even then, however, trying to fully develop such skills in a doctrinal course, especially 1L courses, is difficult. In using the Socratic method, in many instances, the professor either winds up passing over particular students or calling out particular students. Either way, the larger class does not benefit, because either the material is not covered or the class slows. Additionally, the individual student does not benefit, either because they are humiliated or stigmatized. Moreover, those who teach “bar courses,” feel compelled to devote as much time as possible teaching the material that will be covered later on the bar exam itself, leaving little time to devote to helping students at the edges of a class.[x]  This alone, this classroom and school-wide focus on the sub-topics of a course that the bar exam will test is troubling, even if practical, under the present circumstances. Academic support, though, need not focus on those same topics. Academic support can help students in some of the other levels of thinking while in law school and provide support about approaching legal topics that are less well settled than, say, “the rule against perpetuities” (that was tested as recently as 2013 – I think.)

If it is the case that one of the best ways to learn material is to practice it, to take practice “assessments,” then students will learn their material by doing just that, and practice assessments are a recognized tool for mastering a body of material.  However, learning a body of material alone is not enough for success in law school.  While academic support can certainly help students build techniques for understanding and remembering, analogizing, and distinguishing, it is uniquely positioned to explicitly help students develop the skill sets beyond memorizing such as: how to figure out what questions to ask rather than answer, and how to challenge or critique a response. Take for example a skepticism skill. Here, in addition to teasing out what a court says in a decision, students learn to ask whether what a judge says is itself supported by proof; if so, what proof, and does the proof survive the “Aw come on” test.[xi] This skill is, of course, developed in class, but students at the start of law school often confuse skepticism and critique with their own opinion. At some point, class moves on, but the students can still benefit from support – not in the doctrine itself, but in skepticism. This skepticism skill need not be topic specific and is less likely to be useful on a bar exam than other skills, but will serve them remarkably well in practice.

Academic support can of course be, and is, many other things for students.  I’m not suggesting those things change. I’m simply suggesting we think about bar support doing what it is meant to do: prepare students to take multiple choice and essay questions on a set of the same topics semi-annually.  And then, we can think of academic support as designed to help students thrive while in law school itself.

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[i] http://www.ncbex.org/pdfviewer/?file=%2Fdmsdocument%2F226   I have not included questions of the different states for their particular licensing.

[ii] The questions are drafted by the NCBE with the assistance of academics and experts in the fields being tested. The answers, as seems obvious, are based on law existing at the time the questions were created.

[iii] We support students with bar preparation programs and classes. As to the latter, the ABA has put its imprimatur on bar support to the extent of permitting students to take, as part of their academic program in law schools, with several credits of bar preparation classes depending on jurisdiction.  Bar support classes have become an integral part of law school programs.

[iv] Assessing the bar exam itself an ongoing task with studies in several states to assess the efficacy of the test format and connection to skills of practice. https://www.abajournal.com/news/article/members_of_abas_commission_on_the_future_of_legal_education_named  (2017);   https://www.abajournal.com/web/article/building-a-better-bar-exam (2020).  The National Conference of Bar Examiners has its own task force to assess the efficacy of its test. https://testingtaskforce.org/. It is schedule to release a report based on its September survey of Practice Analysis. Thus, the bar exam and bar success occupy a lot of space and time during law school.

[v] We also support student success with a growing number of student-wellness programs, and this in turn is supported by the ABA Young Lawyers Division that has a health and wellness division with resources available to law schools and their students as well as lawyers.

[vi] Topics tested for the past fifty years, though, civil procedure was recently added.

[vii] Never mind the practice of law. At law schools, we help students develop “practice ready” skills in clinics. While it appears the majority of clinics which are litigation-focused clinics, and the subject matter is far broader than the corporate-commercial law bar topic focus, there are so few if any clinics on developing policy, on ethical lobbying, or on transnational practice.

[viii] There are also arguments that the bar exam topics overly emphasize areas of law in the commercial law context to the detriment of other areas of law.

[ix] https://online.law.harvard.edu/.  This year, with the coronavirus, Harvard is offering this program “for free” to other schools. https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2020/05/harvard-makes-online-zero-l-course-free-for-all-us-law-schools-due-to-coronavirus.html.

[x] And, this idea of ensuring bar coverage is common.  https://jle.aals.org/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1299&context=home

[xi] I am sure this phrase, “aw come on” has been used over time by many.  I first heard it from a professor I had in a first-year, year-long contracts class.

Shifting the Focus of Legal Education Back to Just That: Education

I read an article a while ago that has stayed with me titled “Law Schools are Bad for Democracy.”  Given the extraordinary times in which we find ourselves today, I want to be able to disagree.  Law Schools may be one of the few means to save democracy – but not if we keep being distracted[i] by numbers of published article “hits” for rankings or the minutia to which assessments have gone.  In this short piece, I’d like to suggest that we reconsider the broader purpose of legal education and its uniqueness and then rethink some of our priorities for legal education in that context. The perspective we operate from today is the decade-old emphasis on the Big Law gold star standard. [ii]  Isn’t it time to consider what we’ve learned, re-think and make some changes?

We should pay more attention to the bigger picture of legal education, its place in a student’s continuum of education as well as where a legal education may best serve both students and our legal system[iii]. Students come to us with much narrower educational backgrounds than in the past, degreed with any number of concentrations from food or media studies to business, management, or marketing. There are undergraduate concentrations in sustainability. While all these concentrations or majors may help college-graduates enter the job market more quickly, the narrowness of the specializations make our applicants’ education incomplete for law school.  A job-specific specialization in undergraduate school likely means our students lack skills and perspective beyond what was necessary for their specialty.  We have students apply who have never written a full-length paper; have never read – whether in paper or electronically – any of the classics. We have students who have never taken a class in civics or government. When they come to us now, our students need to learn critical thinking not just as a “skill,” but as an integral part of how they think; they need help learning how perspective  informs understanding; and they need help understanding the foundations of law, along with the ability to read and apply precedent as well as rules. Our students need to learn context. Because of limited collegiate exposure and the inward-looking, somewhat impersonal experiences of the social-media generation, our students need to develop an understanding of the people whose disputes were addressed either privately through judicial decisions or publicly through legislation. Further still, our students need to learn to evaluate that foundation for its consistency with democratic values; to critique that foundation by not taking words at face value, and to consider the longer-term consequences to our legal system and society.

It seems to me, given our social times and the state of undergraduate education generally, the need to revisit our focus is imperative. Here are some more specific reasons.

Remember the 2007 Carnegie report and its criticism of law schools for failing to provide law school graduates with enough “skills” for practice? The beginning of the push by Big Law to make sure its incoming associates could do more practical work and thus require less practical firm training?  The year right before the 2008 financial crisis? That’s the year – 2007 – that one of the most recent Senate confirmations to the United States Court of Appeals graduated from law school.  Not quite twelve years ago.[iv]  Right around then, law schools were admonished to keep pace with “trends” in the profession that focused on being employable – already having practice skills and being technology-ready.[v][vi] Part of what makes such judicial inexperience significant to law schools is that in the last two years over 100 new federal judges have been confirmed by the Senate making that number confirmed more than under any previous president. Perhaps even more concerning is that these nominees received more “unqualified” votes than for nominees by all of the previous four presidents combined.[vii] Given the sheer numbers of new appointees alone, though, the role of lawyers in this adversarial system is at an all time high for importance.

But, encouraged by the LSAC,[viii] many law schools still have carved out their niches in narrow areas encouraging students to get a sort of parallel “expertise” that too many under-prepared undergraduate students bring.[ix]  Perhaps like college grads, law school graduates will be able to enter the market more quickly. However, law schools are still criticized for not making students “practice-ready” enough for some law firms; for costing too much, and for not doing enough to help students pass the bar exam[x].  And, to meet the skills and bar scores, law schools have spent hours on “assessments” as though what we really want students to learn is easily quantifiable and measurable. Maybe all of the criticisms are on point, but these repeated criticisms obscure two larger problems – that our students need more perspective and that we may be overly narrow in what we have chosen to “assess.”  Along with undergraduate schools, we have leaned pretty far into assessments.

Even undergraduate school assessment experts have begun to recognize the inadequacies of “assessments.”  In “Harsh Take on Assessment from Assessment Pros” by Doug Lederman,[xi] a group of assessment experts from undergraduate schools found little value in current assessments. The article suggests that efforts to help “’measure’ how much students learn are being used to judge the performance of colleges and universities rather than to help students learn.” The article also suggests that the kinds of information that could be used to help individual students learn and improve the quality of instruction at the university level are not as easily quantified for measurement. For law schools, the problem of using “assessments” as a way to judge law school performance is likely even greater given the multiple layers of accreditation and ranking.[xii]  Lederman cited support in several essays on criticism of assessment, especially “assessment as bureaucratic machine.”[xiii] I really appreciate that phrase:  “assessment as a bureaucratic machine.”

Drawing from the conclusion that assessments designed to measure student learning in a “quantifiable way have been counterproductive,” the article suggests “’backward design’ focused on ‘where do I want them to end up and how do I help them get there.”  That suggestion, though, is followed by repeated criticism of the “’inane’ focus on student learning outcomes[xiv]” as a reminder that reverse engineering ought not to be used to generate yet more narrow outcomes, but to look at evidence of student development and progress – progress that should be seen in light of a school’s identity and purpose.

In “Law Schools Are Bad for Democracy,” Samuel Moyn, professor of law and history at Yale University[xv]  examined how law schools, in his case, elite law schools, struggle to define their own identity and serve the aspirations of their students.  He briefly traced criticisms of elite law schools as serving to entrench social hierarchy. He noted how current criticism suggests law schools remain “factories for mass conversion of pliant subjects into large-firm lawyers” [xvi] while at the same time participation in “strategic legal activism”[xvii] tends to be more of a trend among students.  Prof. Moyn encouraged law schools to re-examine their first-year curriculum that requires learning tenets of judge-made private law and to instead expose students to more public-law courses and help them develop a stronger ability and criteria to critique what they read[xviii].

As part of re-examining law school missions that could be the start of backward design, Prof. Moyn asks: Are law schools supposed to be mostly about educating lawyers to solve other peoples’ private problems? Advance social justice?  And these big picture questions are being raised at the same time sharper criticism is being leveled at the schema used to quantify and “measure” whatever success students have toward whatever those goals are.[xix]

So, if we reverse-engineer from where we want our students – future lawyers and judges – to end up, should we not think more broadly than large law firms as the top priority? Given changing times, should we not reconsider what we prioritize for where our students wind up in their education?  To reverse engineer, evaluate what lawyers bring to our legal system that non-lawyers don’t. At the very least, our students should have knowledge of the law and a broad understanding of all that is our legal system along with their part in that system beyond their experiences as lay people.

What a re-imagined focus might yield for course coverage is complicated and will vary. Everyone may disagree, but I would look at whatever makes having a legal education most valuable – that takes advantage of uniqueness in legal education.  I would imagine a deeper dive into each legal subject putting saving greater breadth of coverage for upper level or additional courses. To allow for deeper examination, maybe reduce the number of “practice” requirements that could otherwise happen on-the-job such as client counseling at the same time still providing some of the more unique, lawyer-only experiences such as trials for context as well as integrated experiences such as in-house clinics that provide depth of knowledge combined with experience and context. Maybe legal writing would focus less on litigation-driven document-drafting; omit the objective memorandum; or focus less on citations because courts have different citation manuals and one really does not need to be a lawyer to prepare citations. Perhaps reconsider school-wide bar passage emphasis on the theory that the law school experience should provide the context and depth as education; bar review courses can, and do, perform the task of skimming the surface of a wide swath of topics in direct preparation for that test. Academic support could focus more on context for understanding law and our legal system rather than teach limited teaching skills like as case briefing.  Given where we are today, I hope re-designing legal education prompts us to focus less on detailed quantifiably measurable skills to ensure assessments are met and more toward striving for student learning that goes beyond what non-lawyers attain.

It seems to me our society would benefit now from law schools reconsidering how we prioritize what our students need to be lawyers, future judges and leaders in the context of the broader picture of our legal system and society. With one hundred new judges and more on the way, the need for well-rounded lawyers to participate in our legal system has never been greater.

 

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[i] Ask who benefits most from those distractions.  You cannot possible think that our justice system benefits by the number of times a law school professor’s article receives a “hit.” There are bots that can generate those hits and downloads.  Johan Sebastian Bach; Henry David Thoreau; Emily Dickinson; Herman Melville; Vincent Van Gogh: these are people who have contributed to western society in incalculable ways but were never famous – didn’t receive the “hits” until after they died.  Counting cites or hits is a distraction.

[ii] https://www.americanbar.org/groups/law_practice/publications/law_practice_magazine/

[iii] There is no doubt that a lawyer’s ability to represent clients out of the gate is important. There is also no doubt that the cost of law school has put many students in the position of searching for the highest paying job.  These are important concerns, just not the subject of this short piece.

[iv] Judge Rudge Rushing obtained a clerkship with then-Judge for the Tenth Circuit Neil Gorsuch.

[v] Five years and one financial crisis later, “Failing Law Schools” hit the market and it criticized schools and faculty for prioritizing research and scholarship over teaching practical skills.

[vi] The book also slammed U.S. News & World Report’s ranking system in part as leading to corrupt practices to get law schools better rankings such as – inflating LSAT scores. Imagine what the author would say about a ranking system that counts what are in essence “hits” on someone’s publications.

[vii] https://news.bloomberglaw.com/us-law-week/trump-picks-more-not-qualified-judges-1

[viii] https://www.lsac.org/discover-law/pathways-legal-career

[ix] Cite Rebecca Flannigan, “The Kids Aren’t Alright: Rethinking the Law School Skills Deficit,” 2015 B.Y.U. Educ. & L.J. 135 (2015).

[x] When bar pass emphasis starts in the first year, I would say the hyper-focus on passing the bar comes close to  missing the point of a legal education.  The Bar exam has problems with its questions; problems as a standardized test, and with emphasis on topics that may or may not be important to future practice. Moreover, as many people have said, the Bar exam is a mile wide and an inch deep.  Our students should have knowledge beyond that surface and the ability to consider and factor much more than rule or rule outlines as they become lawyers.

[xi] Inside higher ed.

[xii] ABA Accreditation for the law school directly; for law schools as part of broader graduate schools Middle States or regional equivalent; evaluation by the larger university.

[xiii] Doug Lederman, “Harsh Take on Assessment from Assessment Pros,” Inside Higher Ed, April 17, 2019. https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2019/04/17/advocates-student-learning-assessment-say-its-time-different-approach at 3-4.

[xiv] Lederman at 5.

[xv] “Law Schools Are Bad for Democracy,” Samuel Moyn, The Chronicle of Higher Education December 16, 2018.  https://www.chronicle.com/article/Law-Schools-Are-Bad-for/245334

[xvi] Id. at 5.

[xvii] Id. at 6.  Other aspects of Prof. Moyn’s article focus more directly on obligations of elite law schools. Because there are more non-elite than elite law schools I have chosen to focus on and adapt concerns to law schools more generally.

[xviii] Interestingly, Prof. Moyn also questions the almost pedestal on which judges are placed. Such criticism seems apt considering the relative inexperience of many new federal judges. Such criticism, though, is important regardless of judicial experience if only because judges are human, too.

[xix]Lederman at 6. This article summarizes events from the Academic Resource Conference by college and universities – not law schools.

Getting Students Out of Their Own Heads – Moving More Toward Justice Oriented Learning

As the New Year begins and I look back on last semester’s first-year student work, I am struck with how challenging it is to guide students into a shared understanding of law and toward an ability to think critically about and evaluate that understanding. I also find myself actively searching for how to reach students in ways that go beyond helping them pass the bar or find a job.  It’s hard enough to get first-year students to start with the same facts, let alone law.  This hurdle exists in part because we come from different life experiences such as racial, gender-based, religious, geographic, social, economic, historic, or cultural group-based memberships that help shape how we understand the world[1]. But, beyond viewing the world through different life experiences, sometimes known as bubbles, people now also have their own “personal facts” which are either chosen or assimilated from what they see on social media, television, or are simply made up. And, as our society becomes more rigidly partisan, personal facts become more fixed and more firmly held by our students. Whereas in the context of teaching persuasion in the past, I might have labeled these fixed positions simply as “contrary” or “argumentative” and pushed students to develop skills of logic – case analysis, statutory interpretation, synthesis, and advocacy, something more is needed now. This era of personal facts adds another layer of difficulty to legal education beyond the lack of academic preparedness students bring to law school.[2]

Teaching law and its value in the context of our rule of law society[3] is itself fundamentally challenging, but that function is complicated by personal facts and is made even more difficult in schools that shift their focus to “student-centeredness”[4] which winds up elevating students’ opinions and then further validating their personal facts.  The rise of student-centeredness goals in law schools reinforces a consumer-preference society and also enables students’ – later lawyers’ – ability to stray from the rule of law.[5] I take for granted for the moment here, that a rule of law society in which power is constrained by rules of law and where those rules have value beyond individual outcome preferences, is preferable to other paradigms[6]. To focus students on the law outside of themselves, professors in the past might have said “judges don’t care what ‘you’ think; they care about the law.” Today, though, if one of us tells a student that judges or we “don’t care” what they think, a student is all too likely to complain, choosing to ascribe some deep personal weight to a fictional lack of caring and then have their complaint heard and responded to, thus missing the lesson of law outside of themselves.[7]  And – yes, I can and do find nicer ways of encouraging students to put aside their own bias, but at some point I am the one spending energy on figuring out how to get across a point in a manner that doesn’t hurt, insult, or otherwise upset a student rather than the student spending time on shifting their perspective and learning.

Student personal perspective today is particularly strong, not always shared, intensely personal, supported by personal facts, and often indulged.  My self-aware upper-level students from the past would have recognized a distinction between personal facts and objective facts and easily distinguished the two.  Personal facts are facts as the student wants them to be or that the student can find – usually on the Internet – to support their idea of what “should” be.[8]  “Objective” facts for purposes of this contrast are facts that exist independently of whether a student is gathering them to make an argument and are usually found in clients’ words, documents, or in assignment or exam hypotheticals. Too much student-centeredness risks not disrupting a fixed mindset or the partisanship of personal facts.

So, as I prepare for next semester, I find myself wishing that, in addition to helping students learn rules of law, I could do more to get my students temporarily out of their own heads – individually and socially.  Each semester, I contemplate the delicate balance between having students learn the law and helping them develop tools to think about the law’s role and how to move it toward making a better society. Lately, that balance has been upset further with personal facts. By “get out of their own heads,” I don’t mean students should develop dissociative disorder; nor do I mean students should permanently ignore their own thoughts.  While I think that developing an adaptable mindset benefits students’ learning,[9] I am really concerned about the tendency students have to draw conclusions based on their own interpretation of a given scenario and their personal feeling about who should “win” and how inconsistent such a perspective is with a lawyer’s obligation to participate in and protect a system of justice for the public. I regularly now find myself trying to figure out how to encourage students to temporarily suspend personal facts and personal results[10] as their learning focus, to consider (not argue) what may make a better society, and to develop some empathy.

Since each student and student cohort comes from a different place – a different perspective – I am often off balance and searching for ideas to realign for educating future lawyers. Three strands have momentarily come together for me, though not exactly harmoniously – the allure of “expertise” as exemplified not only in some recent law school pedagogy[11] but generally in such well-received books as Anders Ericsson and Robert Pool’s Peak:  Secrets from the New Science of Expertise (2016); words given after the passing of a president, and the reminder by a colleague of James Baldwin’s “A Talk to Teachers.”  I think in re-assessing legal education, we might critically draw on what all of these have to offer us.

As I generally understand it, the idea of expert learning is that by developing “mental representations” of what is needed to think clearly about something, getting outside of one’s comfort zone, and by deliberately practicing (trying, receiving feedback, thinking about what one did, and trying again only differently) one can develop new and significantly better skills.[12]  Where there are well-defined standards of performance, expert learning of skills makes sense.  So, for example, extending the skill of memorization through expert learning makes sense in the context of law school – we want students to memorize the rules of law.  Deliberative practice in learning rules is also attractive because it can be taught by that which is arguably familiar to us: “breaking learning down into a series well-specified skills, designing exercises to teach each of these skills in the correct order, and using feedback to monitor progress.”[13]  A key component of expert learning, too, is its emphasis on adaptability[14]– the student requirements of willingness to try, make mistakes, get feedback, and try again differently.  But note – the skills developed through mental representations and deliberate practice work best when achievement can be measured by objective assessment.  Ericcson provides several examples of those situations amenable to this expert learning including chess masters who are able to develop mental representations of different chunks of a game, recall, and use those chunks; athletes; physicists; surgeons, and those who develop perfect pitch in music.[15]  In these examples, it is easy to see how memorizing rules, outlining, IRAC patterning, and trial skills are all amenable to expert learning.

In my attempt at balancing, though, I have found expert learning falls short of what is needed for legal education because of student perspective in two ways – first in students’ learning the law outside themselves at all and second in students’ learning to evaluate the law. Generally, deliberative learning requires an eagerness or at least a willingness to be wrong and receive feedback from an expert – something that Ruth Vance and others suggest may not be first on the list of today’s law students.[16]  Vance asserts today’s law students’ education has been compromised by a focus on testing. She also observes though, that despite arguably weaker academic preparation for law school, students nevertheless share the following traits:  high self-esteem, confidence, a belief that one is special, and a sense of entitlement[17] fully consistent with personal facts.   Thus, a first challenge to expert learning theory is the inability or unwillingness of students to “get out of their own heads” in the sense that they may be overconfident.[18]  This challenge is compounded when overconfidence occurs at the same time as when people are swayed by factors other than education, experience, or seniority, such as friendliness, and attractiveness, and conscious or unconscious bias.[19]  Such judging[20] of another’s competence or expertise allows students to reject expert feedback and preserve their own self-evaluation.[21]

Even where the skills to be learned are amenable to deliberative learning and students can get outside of their own heads and accept expert feedback, the evaluative or critical aspect of learning law on the other hand is not easily amenable to expert learning techniques.  Where skills are not yet well-articulated or where assessment is based on judgment rather than or in addition to some objective criteria, such deliberative learning is more difficult.

My colleague’s reminder of Mr. Baldwin’s “A Talk to Teachers” prompted me to consider how developing critical judgment, because it is derived from experience, specifically calls for something beyond deliberative learning.  Mr. Baldwin’s words, looking at unshared group history and the dissonance between experience and what is taught, point to how difficult it continues to be to help students develop that judgment. Baldwin states, “The paradox of education is precisely this – that as one begins to become conscious one begins to examine the society in which he is being educated. The purpose of education, finally, is to create in a person the ability to look at the world for himself, to make his own decisions. … But no society is really anxious to have that kind of person around. What societies really, ideally, want is a citizenry which will simply obey the rules of society.”[22] We are, no doubt in divisive times, but I think the growing tendency of people to be “judgy,[23]” where people believe only or primarily in their own personal reality, adds a third layer of separation of students from being full participants in our justice system even beyond the systemic concerns raised by Baldwin and others.  But, accepting Baldwin’s premise or even just accepting that our students need to get out of their own heads in order to fulfill their obligations as lawyers in our society, means we need to teach critical thinking in a way that prompts awareness of others, and that integrates critical inward evaluation with outward assessment. And, having personal facts, fake news, and confirmation bias become normalized in law school discourse makes glaringly obvious the existence of such entrenched positions, but may also provide an opportunity for change. This moment also affords a chance for us to check our own preconceptions.

As law faculty, of course we need to be teaching our students to think critically so they can participate in addressing social issues, but critical thinking in the sense of what officers of our legal system must do is not an easily objectifiable skill.[24]  Critical thinking is generally considered a compilation of the skills of conceptualizing, analyzing, synthesizing, applying, and evaluating information. As such, it does at first sound as though it is a skill learned by deliberative practice because those sub-skills are capable of assessment. Moreover, the aspect of deliberative learning that calls for students to go outside their comfort zone, if they will, is important and useful here to critical thinking.  However, what makes critical thinking ultimately so ill-suited yet for deliberative learning is that it inevitably requires one to consider ideas through experience, and we all come from different perspectives; we do not share fundamental experiences, and, our experiences may set us toward conflicting goals. Moreover, the present contracting of perspective to personal facts narrows thinking while widening our differences. Mr. Baldwin’s admonition to examine society should take on greater urgency today because not only are there bubble-differences between us, we have strengthening sub-bubbles of personal facts. Depending on the accuracy of Vance and others’ assessments of law students’ egocentrism, however, little is available to motivate those students[25] to put aside their reluctance to fail[26]or sense of entitlement in order to get outside of their own heads to truly examine society. That our students are adults further increases the challenge. Studies show that the human brain is much more flexible before the age of six than it is in an adult,[27]though the brain remains somewhat malleable. And, while many have suggested metacognition, self-monitoring of one’s own cognition, as a means of progressing toward both being able to accept feedback and to empathize,[28] day-to-day interactions may leave faculty resigned to a conclusion that students do not see the value in change or may even “double down” on their position.  This “double down” can easily mimic deliberative learning – practice until having ingrained some pattern or skill – especially where so many are already inclined toward personal facts and entitlement.

Given current public partisanship and the trend of law schools to be consumer driven, there is also a concern for a lack of will to really challenge student self-perception when to do so may not be considered student-centered and/or is inconsistent with the consumer-oriented positioning of one’s school[29].  It seems we now spend plenty of time and effort on “learning strategies” and “assessments” that are designed to help students “learn” the law and prepare students for that single assessment – the bar exam. I am, however, concerned we will have helped students deliberatively learn strategies and meet objectives that are capable of easy assessment, but will not have met the broader challenge of teaching critical thinking with the purpose of improving society, something beyond passing the bar or getting a job.

As I reflect in preparation for next semester, I have seen that in memorizing the rules and laying out IRAC or CREAC or whatever the requested formula, students have improved over the past several years.  I have found that when my students have practiced taking multiple choice questions over the semester, are given the answers with explanations, and repeat the process, they are more successful on multiple choice exam questions than in years past when I did not have them repeat practice as much.[30]  On the other hand, I have yet to see an equal growth in critical thinking.  In these times, true critical thinking seems much more important than ever.  Because of the extreme partisan positioning of the times, strong student egocentrism, and the consumer focus of law schools, we as faculty have to do more to cultivate empathy, a willingness to be wrong, a willingness to challenge what others say are “facts” and to pierce the bubbles with which people surround themselves, so they can see a much, much larger picture. Finding the will to participate in and teach critical thinking that is not necessarily designed to pass the bar exam seems challenging.

Which brings me to my third thread – the passing of a president and the words spoken to honor that service. These words referred to a leader who “believed in causes larger than” self; one who made “the lives of nations freer, better, warmer, and nobler,’ and who believed that “much is expected to whom much is given.”[31]  Words such as these are aspirational for how we may wish to be remembered and may help re-clarify goals.  As legal education over the past twenty years shifted its goals to be more consistent with a business model, it may have helped students to be more law-firm ready and useful to employers, but, to me, times seem to call for something greater than job preparation – more in line with our responsibility to the broader justice system. We need to not accept the status quo. We need to get out of our own heads and to help our students to get out of theirs and work for causes larger than themselves. And I’ll be honest – I welcome all comers with ideas for how we can do this.

 

 

[1] Some have labeled these perspectives as “bubbles.” Here, most of the discussion in this entry does not focus on the different life starting points that are racial, religious, geographic, social, economic, or gender based but is meant to focus instead on what I consider to be the self-constructed world of individuals that seems to be gaining a more prominent place in the “learning” students bring to law school.

[2] See e.g., Susan Stuart & Ruth Vance, Bringing A Knife to the Gunfight:  The Academically Underprepared Law Student & Legal Education Reform, 48 Val. U.L. Rev. 41, 57-59 (2013). The authors provide extensive citation to studies demonstrating the under-preparedness of students for law school.

[3] Defining “rule of law,” has been the subject of much literature over time – from the Roman era to today and by a range of authors from academicians to those in the military.  For a quick survey of that literature, see Arthur H. Garrison, The Traditions and History of the Meaning of the Rule of Law, 12 Geo. J. L. Pub. Pol’y 565 (2014).

[4] The rise of “student-centeredness” language appears to have begun somewhere in the early 2000’s.  Just some of the law schools that have declared a student-centered institution or atmosphere include Syracuse, Capital, Southern Illinois University School of Law, Gonzaga, Cleveland-Marshall, Albany Law School, Loyola Marymount, Richmond Law School, Southwestern, Rutgers, Lincoln Memorial, and Washington & Lee.  (google search “student-centeredness” and “law school” December 2018)

[5] As first articulated by such innovators as Tony Amsterdam and at our school in the creation of programs designed to contextualize law for students, and as built by learning theorists such as Gerald Hess and others from Gonzaga, student-centered learning had been meant to encourage law faculty to vary teaching style.  Where teaching style was primarily teacher-in-control, student-centered learning encouraged greater interaction with the material and with each other.  The value of interactive-learning is real; the way the term “student-centered” has been hijacked is likewise real.

[6] I recognize those rules are not inviolable; a discussion of whether and how to undergo a systemic change is well beyond the scope of this entry.

[7] There is a growing body of literature on how student evaluations tend to be biased toward what students like, biased against groups, and mainly a popularity contest – failure of which alone may result in loss of position or lack of an offer.

[8] Other synonymous terms include confirmation or opinion bias.  Having personal facts supports one’s ability to be “judgy.” See infra n.20.

[9] See e.g., Sue Schapcott, Sarah Davis, and Lane Hanson, “The Jury Is In:  Law Schools Foster Students’ Fixed Mindsets” 42 Law & Psychol. Rev. 1 (2018) addressing the connection between mindset toward intelligence and professional success.  There, the authors describe Carol Dweck’s “mindset” theory as “one’s perception of the ability to change a trait, characteristic, or skill.”  The authors also summarize research on how students’ mindsets – either growth or fixed – lead to the students’ approach to learning.  For example, students with fixed mindsets, the authors state “are motivated by a need to demonstrate their intelligence. … are more likely to engage in [easy] tasks, … attribute failure to the stupidity of others.” (internal citations omitted).

[10] See e.g., Ruth Vance and Susan Stuart, Of Moby Dick and Tartar Sauce: The Academically Underprepared Law Student and the Curse of Overconfidence,” 53 Duq. L. Rev. 133 (2014). This article focuses on addressing the changed preparedness of students arising from inadequacies in their education from being taught to pass standardized tests so that schools receive funding under the “No Child Left Behind Act” 20 U.S.C. 6301 (2006) to their habit of multi-tasking, and shortened attention spans. More importantly for my purposes here, the article discusses the student mind-set that has emphasized the student as consumer who is competent enough to determine whether the student has been taught well and the consequences thereof. Id. at 143 (citing Catherine J. Wasson & Barbara J. Tyler, How Metacognitive Deficiencies of Law Students Lead to Biased Ratings of Law Professors, 28 Touro L. Rev. 1305, 1316 (2012).

[11] For example, Michael Hunter Schwartz has done work on expert learning. Michael Hunter Schwartz, Expert Learning for Law School, (3d ed. 2018).

[12] Anders Ericcson and Robert Pool, Peal:  Secrets from the New Science of Expertise p. 253-254 (2016).  Expert learning theory is relatively new having been developed from the 1980-1990’s.

[13] Ericsson, supra n. 12 at p. 224.

[14] Adaptability seems to be synonymous with “growth mindset” as contrasted with “fixed mindset.”

[15] An interesting note is that musicians who have practiced since before they were six years old have more developed corpus callosum than those who haven’t practiced since that age.  That part of the brain is responsible for integrating language and for lateralizing language to the left side of the brain which correlates with higher IQ.

[16] See generally Vance, supra n. 10.

[17] Vance, supra n.10 at 134-135 (internal citations omitted).

[18] Of concern is an even more deeply held personal belief and reluctance to rely on experts that is appearing out concern for “fake news” which is that one can’t trust anything.  This range of skepticism or perspective narrowing is a whole other topic.

[19] Vance, supra n.10.

[20] The term “judgy” has its own Urban Dictionary meaning: “As adjective describing a person or their general attitude when they profoundly believe their own reality is the only one, or primary one, in existence, resulting in constant judgment of others (as opposed to ‘being judgmental’ where one consciously draws a judgment on a particular subject.” https://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=Judgy .

[21] Much literature has been devoted to how student bias toward or against a professor interferes with their ability to learn from that professor.

[22] From James Baldwin “A Talk to Teachers” 1963. Unquestionably, many are deeply invested in the status quo.

[23] See n.22.

[24] It goes without saying, though it is said in the Model Rules Preamble, that lawyers have a special obligation to the legal system where they are officers and to society in general.

[25] Or for that matter, faculty and administrative colleagues.

[26] This has been the experience of those who grew up when everyone got a trophy for participating. This is not to say those children didn’t sense the flaws in that system, but is merely to note that this participation reward system has been prevalent for a couple of decades and many have written on its effect on motivation.  See, e.g., Vance, supra, n. 10.

[27] Ericsson, supra n. 12 at loc. 134.

[28] Barbara Kalinowski, “Logic Ab Initio:  A Functional Approach to Improve Law Students’ Critical Thinking Skills,” 221 Legal Writing:  J. Legal Writing Inst. 109 (2018); Patti Alleva, Jennifer A. Gundlach, “Learning Intentionally and the Metacognitive Task,” 65 J. Legal Educ. 710 (2016).

[29] And, of course, when to do so would call for drastic structural change.  See e.g, Nicole Truesdell, “Front Line in the Fight Against White Supremacy,” Inside Higher Ed December 22, 2017. https://www.insidehighered.com/advice/2017/12/22/faculty-trained-speak-about-systems-oppression-should-not-be-required-be-neutral .

[30] I have used LawClass Feedback for three semesters now and have seen improvement, but correlation is not causation and I have far too small a sample or repetitions to draw conclusions.

[31] Jon Meacham’s eulogy of George H.W. Bush https://www.c-span.org/video/?c4764801/jon-meacham-delivers-eulogy-president-george-hw-bush-state-funeral .

Considering Social Value Orientation as Part of Developing Professional Identity

So many events recently have made me think about perspective – the point from which people view the world, and that perspective’s import.  Perspective in the public is antipodal in far too many ways. Yet, to me, it seems obvious that lawyers must have as part of their professional identity – character and qualities that distinguish lawyers as professionals –  a more open-minded world view because of their responsibility to the legal system. Clearly, that professional identity needs fostering. Yes, developing that professional identity while a law student, maybe even checking it later as a lawyer, is probably more challenging today than ever. As at least one author points out[i] and a quick look at the news shows, professionalism of lawyers is not at its best – from lack of civility to over-contentiousness and a willingness to distort facts to win at all costs.  The risks when lawyers lack or lose sight of a bigger picture remind me of Thomas Hobbes’s question about how society can exist at all when everyone is driven by self-interest or self-focus.[ii]  Those concerns are at least as troubling today for law schools and their current and future students especially where law schools are viewed more as businesses, and students come in bargaining not so much for opportunities in an educational program or to work with a gifted scholar or teacher, but to demand more money to attend a school.[iii]  This apparent focus on self-interest (and I mean the statement as an observation, not a judgment here) when juxtaposed against a lawyer’s broader professional purpose, inevitably creates a kind of social dilemma[iv] for students if not for lawyers. Now is surely a time when more is needed from law schools to help students cultivate perspective given their future role in the legal system.

Historically, similar concern about the role of lawyers have been raised. “The law is the witness and external deposit of our moral life,” wrote Oliver Wendell Holmes wrote in 1897;[v] which was in part to say that positions advocated and law that results reflect who we are as a civilization and that as lawyers, we bear responsibility for more than our own interests or even our client’s results.  In this context, after noting how a lawyer’s training is principally in logic and judicial decisions written in the “language of logic,” Holmes wrote, “Behind the logical form lies a judgment as to the relative worth and importance of competing [] grounds, often an inarticulate and unconscious judgment, it is true, and yet the very root and nerve of the whole proceeding.”[vi] Then, to encourage education toward that judgment beyond “textbooks and the case system, and all the machinery with which a student comes most immediately in contact,” Holmes wrote, “I cannot but believe that if the training of lawyers led them habitually to consider more definitively and explicitly the social advantages on which the rule they lay down must be justified, they sometimes would hesitate where now they are confident, and see that really they are taking sides upon debatable and often burning questions.”[vii] In other words, Holmes considered legal education the place to develop a perspective that also looks to social consequences more broadly and, as part of professional responsibility, to consider and weigh the impact.

Justice Cardozo similarly wrote of the legal profession itself, “Membership in the bar is a privilege burdened with conditions. A fair private and professional character is one of them.”[viii]  The Model Rules of Professional Responsibility Preamble in turn, reads, “A lawyer, as a member of the legal profession, is a representative of clients, an officer of the legal system, and a public citizen having special responsibility for the quality of justice.”  And, the ABA requires law schools to establish goals for student competency in not only substantive and procedural law, analysis, research, communications, but also ethical practice skills to fulfill responsibilities to clients and the legal system, as well as to establish goals in “other professional skills needed for competent and ethical participation as a member of the legal profession[ix].”  By setting such standards, including cultivating diversity, the legal profession, through the American Bar Association and the law schools it accredits, has provided a professional standard that requires lawyers, to be aware of, consider, and weigh broader social contexts and values.

Set against history, the standards’ language allows the inference then that competent and ethical membership in the profession – professional identity – is “fair personal character” and something in addition to “ethics” – the minimum standard of conduct and professionalism or civility[x].  Professional identity needs to include the internalized ability and willingness to both be aware of one’s own perspective and its effect as well as to consider and assign value to societal consequences.[xi] This combination of private and professional character would be in line with that suggested by Holmes and Cardozo. A lawyer’s habitual awareness of perspective and its effect, followed by intentional decision-making coupled with an attitude of respect toward others and the legal system seem a good starting point as components of professional identity. [xii]

One tool among several[xiii] to help students appreciate perspectives on the road to professional identity is social value orientation. Social value orientation is a construct derived from values research that measures perspective or motivations that influence actor behavior in relation to other actors when the outcomes and resource allocation[xiv] of their interaction are interdependent – a psychological categorization of perspectives that may underly say, use of the Risk-Utility balancing test, for example.  Within the social valuation orientation (SVO) framework, there are several categories of orientations including individualistic (pro-self); cooperative (prosocial); competitive (also pro-self); altruistic; self-sacrifice; equalitarian, and nihilism.[xv] One author provides the following overview of several main orientations.[xvi]

  1. Generosity:
    • Enhancement of Outcomes for Other
  2. Pro-social Orientation:
    • Enhancement of Joint Outcomes (Cooperation), and
    • Enhancement of Equality of Outcomes (Egalitarianism)
  3. Individualism:
    • Enhancement of Outcomes for Self
  4. Competition:
    • Enhancement of Relative Outcomes in Favor of Self
  5. Aggression:
    • Reduction of Outcomes for Other

The middle three orientations are most common, and discussion here is limited to those.[xvii]

Briefly, then, for this purpose, social value orientation can be viewed in two broad categories: pro-self and pro-social, [xviii] and within each of those two broad categories, researchers have paired traits:  cooperative (pro-social); individualistic (pro-self), and competitive (pro-self).[xix]  For anyone who has taught negotiations starting somewhere in the last century (!), these categories sound familiar as negotiation perspectives (competitive-cooperative; adversarial-problem solving).  Generally speaking, most people’s orientation ranges, and some studies indicate no one is fully altruistic or cooperative, for example. Researchers have conducted extensive measurements of social value orientation and preferred outcomes over decades using a variety of measures.  One such relatively straight forward personal assessment tool includes a set of questions where the participant selects from three options that allocate points between self and others. Different “incentives” may be included.  For example, participants may be told that the more points they accumulate, the better for them and that the same is true for the “other.”  They may be told that the greater the difference in point spread, the better.  The measurement tool might look like this[xx]:

For each of the nine choice situations below, circle A, B or C, depending on which column you prefer most. Please proceed in the order the choices appear. (only three choice situations are given here.)

  A B C
You Get 480 540 480
Other Gets 80 280 480

 

  A B C
You Get 560 500 500
Other Gets 300 500 100

 

  A B C
You Get 520 520 580
Other Gets 520 120 320

After nine such choice situations, the participant tallies up points – one per choice situation and then compare with the chart above.  Outcomes where six or more of the nine choices result in a point difference between self and other that most favors self is considered a “competitive” preference. (pro-self) Outcomes where six or more choices result in the most points or highest point outcome for self, represent an individualist preference.  (pro-self) Finally, outcomes where six or more choices result in equal distribution of points represent the cooperative or prosocial preference. Using a tool such as this, students, then, could be introduced to their own social value orientation by self-assessment. Of course, social value orientation varies by person and can vary by situation, so the object here is for students to become conscious of and pay attention to these perspectives. Notice, too, that social value orientation is not meant to address directly moral, religious, or other specific values. Social value orientation is meant to measure self-versus-other orientation as a base line. This base line can then be used to help students to see such orientations at work in the law and world and to begin their own professional identity development.

Social value orientation study is not new; it has been widespread for over forty years, though primarily in other social sciences. Social value orientation has been the subject of extensive empirical research in different settings ranging from public games to negotiations.[xxi] Research has also been conducted on how detection of another’s SVO can influence one’s own cooperation-competition behavior which for lawyers suggests a potential for losing oneself.[xxii]  On one extreme, for example, one who is highly competitive – perhaps considered aggressive, when confronted with what was perceived as the lack of another’s cooperation, responded with even greater competition.  The SVO categories are not nearly as rigid as they appear, and, like most things in social science, are open to interpretation. For example, zealously advancing a client’s agenda may be viewed as pro-self if the agenda is shared and part of the purpose is to earn the fee or if client stands in for the “self.” On the other hand, such representation may be considered prosocial because it is done for the other – the other being the client. This layer of assessment made be done even before considerating whether the result of representation will be prosocial or pro-self.  The study of SVO opens a door using shared language to examining perspective as a precursor to fostering further professional identity education.

At least one author who is a law professor[xxiii], Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff, has recently written in depth on social value orientation and the law from the perspective of connecting social value orientation to doctrine in corporate law, contract law, and family law.[xxiv] One of the several great take-aways from that article is the idea that social value orientation can be used as a discussion tool in substantive law courses to encourage students to consider context in understanding the development of law and to assess their own perspective and choices using a shared framework.  Social value orientation awareness and examination can happen in all classes and have the potential to broaden student’s minds to that bigger picture needed to be active members in our profession.  Such examination could lead students to be more conscious of their and others’ preferences and perhaps to re-examine choices in that light.  This awareness and re-examination are part of professional growth.  And, at some point, our integrity may require us all to re-check our social value orientation.

With more law school applicants coming to law school from business and other narrowly-focused specialty degrees and without a broad background in liberal arts or the humanities, we may be the last opportunity for students to be exposed to the kind of self and other examination needed for students to look out, rather than in. Our students then may be in a better position to more consciously develop qualities that prompt them to recognize their and others’ “unconscious [personal] judgment” and then use professional judgment considering broader societal impacts to have that “fair personal and professional character” necessary to fulfill our profession’s purposes.

At any rate, simply considering whether a given decision is pro-self or prosocial is an interesting exercise and worth taking a moment this summer to try[xxv].

[i] Debra Moss Curtis, “’No Shots, No School, No Kidding’: The Legal Profession Needs a Vaccine to Ensure Professionalism,” 28 U. Fla. J.L. & Pub. Pol’y 1, 4 (2017).
[ii] Leviathan (1651)
[iii] I have not lost sight of student debt and its consequences. I also recognize there has been an uptick in law school applications since 2016 and hope that uptick is a sign of interest in participating in our legal system as a social institution more than as a means of making money – especially because until this year, students have had substantial debt at the same time few law firms had given substantial raises.
[iv] A social dilemma is a situation in which the interests of the collective and its individual members clash. In these situations, individuals typically are tempted to take actions that favor (sometimes even maximize) their short-term egocentric interests. However, if all group members adopt such behaviors, the group suffers since all its members are worse off than they could be by endorsing alternative prosocial actions that favor (sometimes even maximize) the collective interest.  Study of social value orientation can make these choices and consequences apparent.
[v] Oliver Wendell Homles Jr., “The Path of the Law,” 10 Harv. L. Rev. 457 ___ (1897).
[vi] Id. at ___
[vii] Id. at ____
[viii] Matter of Rouss, 221 N.Y. 81, 84 (1917) (citing Selling v. Radford, 243 U.S. 46, 47 (1917).
[ix] ABA Standards 301a and 302 a-d.
[x] At least two authors have suggested that law schools consider a person’s values (not in the sense of left or right), but in the sense of ability to integrate standards of norms and conduct beyond those merely required by ethics rules.  Marjorie Shultz & Sheldon Zedeck, “Predicting Lawyer Effectiveness:  Broadening the Basis for Law School Admissions Decisions,” 36 Law & Soc. Inquiry 620 (2011).
[xi] Model Rule of Professional Responsibility 202 – Counselor states: In representing a client, a lawyer shall exercise independent professional judgment and render candid advice. In rendering advice, a lawyer may refer not only to law but to other considerations such as moral, economic, social and political factors, that may be relevant to the client’s situation.” Although, the comment indicates a lawyer is not expected to give such advice unless asked by a client – an expectation that may warrant re-examination.
[xii]Early literature has touched on this combination when referring to cognitive bias and game theory, but social value orientation measures a more complex combination of factors.
[xiii] Just a few other examples include: helping students understand their intrinsic value system through mindfulness. Jan L. Jacobowitz, “Cultivating Professional Identity & Creating Community:  A Tale of Two Innovations”, 36 U. Ark. L. Rev. 319 (2014); finding happiness or personal value in being a lawyer, Steven Keeva, Transforming Practices – Finding Joy and Satisfaction in the Legal Life (2002); Lawrence S. Krrieger & Kennon M. Sheldon, “What Makes Lawyers Happy?: A Data-Driven Prescription to Redefine Professional Success,” 83 Geo. Wash. L. Rev. 554 (2015); and habituating a commitment to purpose and professional development, several articles from the Georgia Symposium on Ethics and Professionalism in 68 Mercer L. Rev. 583 (2017), including Timothy W. Floyd & Kendall L. Kerew, “Making the Path from Law Student to Lawyer:  Using Field Placement Courses to Facilitate the Deliberate Exploration of Professional Identity and Purpose,” 68 Mercer L. Rev. 767 (2017) and Neil Hamilton, “Off-the-Shelf Formative Assessments to Help Each Student Develop Toward a Professional Formation/Ethical Professional Identity Learning Outcome of an Internalized Commitment to the Student’s Own Professional Development,” 68 Mercer L. Rev. 687 (2017)(with some great ideas for lessons).
[xiv] Preference for resource allocation and value assigned to potential outcomes of that distribution is the main focus of social value orientation study.  Resources are broadly defined and can include economic resources, but also such things as access to legal process, and perhaps the legal process itself.  The studies focus on outcomes – not on a strategy for allocation. Although, understanding social value orientation and the growing research on how the interplay between the parties prompts cooperative and competitive behavior in the other may provide a basis for strategy or to alter or adapt preferences. The studies do not, however, focus on whether one’s religion, or custom or personal morality are somehow preferable, nor does it directly measure orientation to those types of values.
[xv] Wing Tung Au and Jessica Y.Y. Kwong, “Measurements and Effects of Social-Value Orientation in Social Dilemas,” 71, Contemporary Research on Social Dilemmas (Suleiman et al eds 2004); Paul A.M. van Lange, “From Generosity to Aggression, Five Interpersonal Orientations Relevant to Social Dilemmas,” 3-9 Contemporary Research on Social Dilemmas (Suleiman et al eds 2004).
[xvi] Paul A.M. van Lange, “From Generosity to Aggression, Five Interpersonal Orientations Relevant to Social Dilemas,” at 9.
[xvii] Aggression – tendency to purposefully minimize outcomes for the other.
[xviii] Au & Kwong, at 71.
[xix] Id.
[xx]See, e.g., Ryan O. Murphy et al “Measuring Social Value Orientation,” 6 Judgment and Decision Making 771-781 (2011).
[xxi] Research in social value orientation considers many permutations and situations – integration of the orientations, consequences when competing orientations intersect, underlying relationships of participants, incorporation of other considerations such as risk preference or risk aversion, trust and trustworthiness, “tit for tat” strategies, effect of uncertainty, relationship between leader and group member, just to name a few.  This entry is meant solely to introduce the very basic concept of social value orientation.
[xxii] I’d note that one who is individualistic to the point of aggression is most likely to ramp up competition in the face of anything other than complete cooperation in the other.
[xxiii] Most material written on social value orientation comes from other disciplines and much of that comes from Europe.
[xxiv] Rebecca Hollander-Blumoff, “Social Value Orientation and the Law,” 59 William & Mary Law Review ___ (2017).  This is a great, in depth article.
[xxv] Figuring out social value orientation is a little like assessing body language in, say, your classroom for a new set of students – the results are fascinating if not distracting.

“Mixing It Up: Interweaving Lecture/Lesson and Retrieval Practice for Better Test Results.”

A colleague recently shared a blog entry given to secondary school students on better studying.  The blog encouraged students to engage with the material and practice retrieval as part of learning[i] – not quite labeling this active learning.   That entry aimed at high-schoolers is grounded in the idea, supported by studies, that most students in high school and college spend most of their “study” time re-reading and re-highlighting material.[ii] The re-reading and highlighting give students the “illusion” of having mastered the material”[iii]  instead of better enabling students to actually learn material.  This entry is a brief pitch for still more varied and active studying through retrieval practice and some optimism that some secondary schools are encouraging more practice learning of their students thereby better equipping them to be our students.

Retrieval practice or “testing effect” is a positive learning effect that occurs when students are tested or required to retrieve information while they are studying.[iv]  Accepting for this entry’s purpose study conclusions that retrieval practice aides learning, when and maybe how to engage in that retrieval practice seem apt questions.

A recent study by Weinstein, Nunes, and Karpicke, “On the Placement of Practice Questions During Study,” (2016) [v] assessed whether practicing retrieval interspersed within a lesson or unit or waiting until the end of a lesson or unit to practice retrieval led to the greatest learning.  The study also compared those students who had practiced some retrieval questions with students who did not have any retrieval practice questions but merely re-studied material in both online and live-class settings.  The study used three experiments to assess student memory during the study phase in quizzes and then after a delay in a test[vi].

The results were interesting and varied depending whether and when students had practice questions and then were tested. The results seemed also to vary depending on whether the material was presented online so students could interact with the material or was presented in a classroom, although the authors did not discuss this distinction[vii].  Students given practice questions interspersed in a lesson scored higher on an immediate post-lesson quiz than students given practice questions at the end of the lesson but right before the quiz. The authors attribute this difference to the closeness of the questions to the material presented, among other things.[viii]  For all three experiments, student scores on a test given after a delay of at least a week were roughly the same, though, regardless of whether students had practice questions during or at the end of a lecture.  The time delay before testing seemed to level out any interspersed-question-advantage over the short term so that groups who had received practice questions during a lecture and those who had practiced at the end of a lesson had similar delayed test scores.  Good news for mixing-up when to give practice questions.

But, in all three experiments, students who received some practice questions – whether during a lecture or at the end of a lesson – performed significantly better on a delayed test than did students who had no practice questions, but simply “re-studied” material.  Students who had no practice questions where they were called upon to practice retrieval and apply information, but merely re-studied their material, scored lowest on delayed tests.[ix]

This consistency – students performing better short-term with questions interspersed during lectures and long-term similarly with practice questions either interspersed or at the end –  led the authors to conclude that practice questions aided in student learning and left for future study whether practice questions interspersed during a lecture coupled with practice questions also given at the end might have the greatest benefit on delayed tests.[x]

The Weinstein study results and the suggestions for improving retention and possibly learning are interesting not only because they posit study tools that are demonstrably more effective than re-reading or highlighting alone, but because those results demonstrate the fluidity in the cognitive domain taxonomy upon which many base teaching or learning exercises. (Bloom’s or Bloom’s, Anderson’s, & Krathwohl’s cognitive taxonomy). Briefly, the taxonomy is a hierarchical[xi] classification or ordering of cognitive skills. The cognitive domain taxonomy is most often, though not always, visualized through pyramids with knowledge (Bloom’s) or remembering (Anderson-Krathwohl) at the base.  That pyramid, though, is not exactly representative of learning – at least on the college level, as these referenced studies seem to reflect.  What can also be inferred from the studies on retrieval practice, is that learning occurs not based on having the knowledge or remembering alone, but happens more effectively when the other, maybe even all other, classifications (create, evaluate, analyze, apply, understand) are engaged and interwoven in students’ active practice.  Put a different way:  students who rely on flash-cards or outlines alone will likely be less successful on tests than those who are more engaged in their learning.

As an example of interwoven practice, the handout, “A Brief Guide” mentioned above, set out five ways of studying the authors, based on studies, suggest would be more effective ways of learning than repeating or re-reading.  Those study tools include retrieval practice, questions & answers, concrete examples, spaced practice, and interleaving. Although the guide is aimed at secondary school-level students, the tools will sound familiar to those studying teaching and learning theory at undergraduate and graduate levels. Not surprisingly, the guide suggests that students use all the learning tools and not just re-study.

The first tool, retrieval practice, (remembering) is defined more narrowly in the guide than in the studies.  That first tool encourages students to try to recall what they have learned from a chapter by, among other things, creating flashcards.  The key to this retrieval practice, of course, is that the flash card creator be the student and not someone else, because the preparation of the cards is the stronger retrieval practice, not the repetition or recitation from the card.

The second and third tools, questions & answers and creating concrete examples for abstract concepts, encourage students to ask questions about material – not mere recall questions here, but questions about how and why and then relate those to life. (evaluate, analyze, apply, understand) The guide encourages students to self-study which would require students to practice all this questioning on their own and may or may not allow for verification.  The Weinstein study, though, demonstrates the efficacy of including those same kinds of questions and hypotheticals both during a class and after class, and in any event, demonstrates the importance of some practice questions whether during or after class.[xii]

The last two study tools involve spacing practice and mixing it up.  Spacing practice means to do some studying every day rather than cram before a test – something most law students seem to learn eventually even if through trial and error.  Mixing-it-up or “interleaving” means students are to challenge their thinking by making retrieval more difficult through practicing different topics during a given study period.

So, what can we gain from these studies and the guide? It seems the old cliché, “practice makes perfect” or at least proficient, is still valid.

I have to add I found it heartening that a handout such as this is being offered at the secondary school level, perhaps better preparing students for graduate school study.  And, while many schools have finished or nearly finished final exams, graduating 3Ls have the bar exam to look forward to, so, there is still time to improve study patterns.

[i] “How Should Students Revise:  A Brief Guide” https://chronotopeblog.com/2018/05/05/how-should-students-revise-a-brief-guide/  .

[ii] Karpicke, Butler, and Roediger, “Metacognitive strategies in student learning: Do students practice retrieval when the study on their own?” (2009). http://learninglab.psych.purdue.edu/downloads/2009_Karpicke_Butler_Roediger.pdf (citations omitted) (surveying student study strategies including rereading notes – the largest percentage of students; doing practice problems and using flashcards – second largest group; rewriting notes & studying with a group – the third most students; with “memorise”, next, followed by making outlines, practicing self-recall, and thinking of real life examples as a very distant last place for student self-reported learning strategies).

[iii] Koriat & Bjork, “Illusions of Competence in Monitoring One’s Own Knowledge” https://bjorklab.psych.ucla.edu/wp-content/uploads/sites/13/2016/07/Koriat_RBjork_2005.pdf .

[iv] Id. These studies, which focus on how to study, inevitably rely on the premise that of material stored in short term memory roughly half is lost following twenty-four hours, and that more successful learning requires information to be stored in longer term memory and made easily accessible – sometimes known as “working memory.” Baddley A.D., & Hitch, G. “Working Memory.” In G.H. Bower (ed.) The Psychology of Learning and Motivation:  Advances in Research and theory. (Vol. 8, pp.47-89) (1974).

[v] Weinstein, Nunes, & Karpicke, “On the Placement of Practice Questions During Study,” 22, J. Experimental Psych: Applied No. 1 72-84 (2016) http://learninglab.psych.purdue.edu/downloads/2016_Weinstein_Nunes_Karpicke_JEPA.pdf  To be sure, these experiments did not involve the kinds of material law students must master, and the authors did posit a distinction between content with differing levels of complexity.  The authors used written questions requiring short answers as their measuring tool – they did not include in the study any kind of oral Q & A or hypothetical examination as may be more common in law school.

[vi] Id. There are factors the study remained focused by ruling out such things as diverse educational background of students; prior knowledge of subject matter; variation in question difficulty, and complexity of learned material.  The students were undergraduate students; the subject matter was always the same; the questions asked required short answer responses, and the questions were identical across the experiment.  The authors leave open the impact of information complexity and different question requirements as unstudied.  The authors also note the possibility of a psychologically positive motivation for students who have had practice questions and received feedback when those students took the delayed test.  The authors posited that students who have already practiced successfully may be more motivated to be successful on the delayed test than those who have not.  The authors leave psychological benefit to future study.

[vii] The material taught and tested included In-Text Citation requirements APA style.

[viii] Perhaps this proximity reflects the general sense that short term memory is strongest during the first twenty-four hours after learning.

[ix] Id.

[x] See Weinstein, supra n. v.

[xi]  Bloom’s taxonomies were originally stacked – meaning that to achieve the next level of cognition, the first level must be achieved. Stacking is emphasized less today.

[xii] One of the suggestions the authors included was that students were more successful when they had immediate feedback – after practice questions compared with the delayed test results where feedback came after grading.

Re-assessing the “drive” to measure learning outcomes

A recent NY Times editorial, “The Misguided Drive to Measure ‘Learning Outcomes” by Molly Worthen, prompted revisiting the purpose-driven nature of what are labeled “educational” trends and this trend in particular – especially as it relates to legal education. Although quantifying “learning outcomes” has been pushed at the secondary and undergraduate levels for a while, it is now being required of legal educators.  As a lawyer and legal educator faced with the direction to set and measure learning outcomes, I have found myself conflicted in part because I find its limitations and the funneling nature of metrics incongruous with its language of education drawn from Bloom’s taxonomies.  There is also a current of politicization in the “drive.” In the end, the unique responsibilities of law school faculty as lawyers and in planning and implementing a school’s educational program is significant. Those roles inform the use and effectiveness of setting goals and actively paying attention to our effect on students – after getting past the lingo, of course.

At the outset, I found myself skeptical of the trend’s origins as an “educational” tool at all.  As the Worthen piece points out, although the push to quantify undergraduate learning is about a hundred years old, the real drive grew in the 1980’s. That decade’s impetus for quantification of teaching came during a time known for materialism, yuppies, the rapid growth of technology, and then President Reagan’s promise to return  prayer to school. Given this origin in an era of consumerism and growing talk of “liberalism” in higher education, it is readily inferrable that assessing learning objectives was the product of accreditors and the institutions they control with financial and conservative goals; see, David Clemens “Student Learning Outcomes and the Decline of American Education,” August 31, 2016, fostering assessment less as an educational goal and more as a means of control.

Moreover, the idea of “measuring outcomes” is inherently a business or economics concept or a concept more aptly used when discussing computers; it thus seems inapposite in legal education unless education is truly primarily a business or the language is adapted.  Outcomes, inputs, and outputs are terms used when major donors, for example, look for data-driven proof that their resources produce something.  Outputs are readily measureable.  Outcomes, the effect on people served that occurs because of the resource use, are much less readily measureable.  A donor then withdraws support when outputs don’t exceed inputs or outcomes are unmet.  Worthen notes that outcomes measurement was extended to undergraduate education because of accrediting agencies that demanded a form of learning assessment as a means of demonstrating fitness to receive federal student financial aid – a sort of stand-in for the donor as fund provider.  The telling part of the development of learning outcomes measurement is its push from employers.  Worthen wrote “Employers report repeatedly that many new graduates that they hire are not prepared to work, lacking the critical thinking, writing and problem-solving skills needed in today’s workplace” quoting then President Bush’s 2006 Commission on the Future of Higher Education’s Report.  I’m hard pressed to find teachers or professors who demanded development of assessments.

The direct pressure to produce learning outcomes in legal education comes from the ABA – likewise after major law firm employers similarly decried a lack of practice readiness in student graduates. Their complaints arose concurrent with a downturn in the economy that led those same employers to reduce their internal practice training.  With law schools pushed to the consumer, business model of delivering education, the slide into measuring outcomes has occurred despite criticism.

And, much of what is written about measuring learning outcomes other than by its developers is highly critical. Several early critical articles start from the position that significant aspects of education are simply not measurable because in part, education is a process, not a product a la Jerome Bruner. Thus, they argue, attempting to “measure” learning outcomes is inconsistent with good education. E.g.,  James Mckernan, Some Limitations of Outcome-Based Education. Journal of Curriculum and Supervision. Volume 8. 343-353 (1993).  That critique suggests measuring learning outcomes assumes knowledge can be broken down into “micro-outcomes” in disregard of the epistemology of knowledge (Mckernan) as theorized by some like Herbert Dreyfus to include background and experience that cannot be readily measured. Others criticize outcomes measurements for shifting the emphasis from learning to some kind of outcome at all, thereby ignoring the open-ended nature of education and encouraging rigidification of curriculum and perspective.  E.g., The Unhappiness Principle (November 29, 2012)  https://www.timeshighereducation.com/the-unhappiness-principle/421958.article . In a related way, still others have criticized the move toward measuring “learning outcomes” because a teacher’s success is dependent on whether students learn regardless of what students bring to the classroom referencing post cognitive learning theory and because targeting “outcomes” encourages teaching to the middle or bottom of a class to meet stated outcomes while ignoring other students.

Worthen notes as criticism the “obsession with testing that dominates primary education [has] invaded universities” pointing out a focus and resource shift to assessment rather than education.  Consistent with this concern about emphasizing testing and assessment over exploration, other authors have pointed to apprehension about how pressure on students to succeed according to measured external standards without cultivating personal morality has led to law student depression and cynicism. See Lawrence Krieger, Institutional Denial About the Dark Side of Law School, and Fresh Empirical Guidance for Constructively Breaking the Silence, 52 J. Legal. Educ. 112 (2002); see also Larry Natt Grantt and Benjamin Madison, Self-Directedness and Professional Formation: Connecting Two Critical Concepts in Legal Education (draft).

At least one critique focused not on educational soundness but more on the regulatory purpose of measuring assessments.  In a piece written for a conservative nonprofit institute, the author wrote “learning outcomes and assessment are not about education at all; they are about control.” David Clemens “Student Learning Outcomes and the Decline of American Education,” August 31, 2016 https://www.jamesgmartin.center/2016/08/student-learning-outcomes-decline-american-education/.  The author went on to note how political sides view outcomes differently though both sides see the outcomes as a tool for control.  “The right sees [learning outcomes] as a way to enforce professor accountability, increase ‘productivity,’ and get rid of bad teachers and junk courses.  The left sees [learning outcomes] as a golden opportunity to promote progressivism through ideological outcomes that students must internalize in order to pass.” The same author went on to note by way of example how selecting outcomes such as “build awareness of the history and context of diversity and social justice in [the State]” are “not the sort of thing” that “my conservative friends had in mind” for student learning outcomes.

Assuming in law schools we somehow adapt the economics terminology to legal education, measuring learning outcomes seems to be a policy that will continue for a time.  In legal education, of great significance, of course, is the responsibility of faculty for setting the program of education. Even revisioning learning goals as learning outcomes, the questions remain: in law school, what is meant by education, what can and what should be measured, and what is there about law and law practice that should form the basis of legal education whether measured.    In a short piece “What is Education? Insights from the World’s Greatest Minds,” https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/the-moment-youth/201405/what-is-education-insights-the-worlds-greatest-minds, Marilyn Price-Mitchell, Ph.D. offers, among other things, the following about education:

            “The principle goal of education in the schools should be creating men and women who are capable of doing new things, not simply repeating what other generations have done.” Jean Piaget

            “Education is what remains after one has forgotten what one has learned in school.” Albert Einstein

            “Education is the most powerful weapon which you can use to change the world.” Nelson Mandela

            The law, unlike computers and math, is like the people who make it – reasoned but imperfect, biased, aspirational, short-sighted, flawed, reflective of society, and constantly changing; legal education goals should reflect those dynamics.  Although some schools have sought regional accreditation from the same entities that accredit undergraduate schools, legal education itself remains distinguishable from education at other institutions if only because it is governed by a professional set of standards unique to legal education.  The ABA Standard 302 obligates accredited law schools to establish minimum learning outcomes in the following areas: (a) Knowledge and understanding of substantive and procedural law; (b) Legal  analysis  and  reasoning,  legal  research,  problem-solving,  and  written  and  oral communication in the legal context; (c) Exercise of proper professional and ethical responsibilities to clients and the legal system; and (d) Other professional skills needed for competent and ethical participation as a member of the legal profession.  “Micro-outcomes” are not required, and “understanding” is one of the outcomes under the ABA.  It seems counter-intuitive and inconsistent with the goals of legal education that “micro-outcomes” set for other university degrees should somehow supersede ABA standards. For example, though “understanding” seems not to be an appropriate outcome under Middle States standards, it is clearly an outcome under ABA standards. Certainly for purposes of remaining ABA compliant, it seems appropriate to read general education standards in light of the specialized standards of a legal education if only to ensure bar passage and ethical participation as a member of our profession.

Not surprisingly then, beyond knowledge, analytical, and communication objectives, the ABA requires professional skills and ethical responsibilities goals aimed at both clients and the legal system we serve. Consistent with the idea that the law is about people, the people who make and the people who serve and are served by it, ABA Interpretation 302-1 further states that other law schools may determine other professional skills including, among others, “cultural competency.”  Thus, it would seem that while “build[ing] awareness of the history and context of diversity and social justice” may not have been what was initially in the minds of those who pushed for measuring learning outcomes as a way of “increasing productivity,” awareness of cultural differences and building cross-cultural competencies is nevertheless a specifically enumerated learning outcome that law schools may set. Any outcomes created under ABA standards are significant to the how students may come to learn not only the rules, but to view the law in context and in practice.

Despite the economics origin and terminology of “measuring” “outcomes,” and the difficulty in measuring some learning goals in law school – at least those goals in addition to passing the bar exam – perhaps as a colleague suggested, we might recognize the opening to address the context in which law is made and practiced more.  Consistent with our oath’s commitment to uphold the Constitution and ethical participation in our profession, decide what can be achieved in addition to knowledge and understanding of procedural law and practice skills.  Start with the aspirational; establish goals that begin with awareness that can be measured, and then hope for the enlightenment that comes from the experience after awareness all the while recognizing we may not need to measure everything.

 

Law Student Wellness Awareness

As most are aware, the New York Times published an essay on July 15, 2017, entitled, “The Lawyer, the Addict” recounting the writer’s tragic loss of her lawyer-loved one to drug-overdose.  A significant part of the tragedy was that the lawyer successfully hid the addiction for years.  As we consider programming for Fall Semester orientation and beyond, this is a good time to give more consideration to addressing depression, anxiety, substance abuse and addiction among law students. 

In this regard, I strongly encourage downloading and taking a look at the “Substance Abuse & Mental Health Kit for Law Students and Those Who Care About Them”,” put together by the ABA Law Student Division, the ABA Commission on Lawyers Assistance Programs, and the Dave Nee Foundation. The ABA Law Student Division has also created a web site and begun compiling links to resources for law students under Mental Health Resources.

The 2016 Report, published in the Journal of Addiction Medicine referenced in the NY Times, reports on the significant numbers of lawyers affected by depression, substance abuse and addiction as well as the numbers of law students affected.  And, as so many articles and the 2016 Report note, in law students, the driven qualities that propel students to go to law school; law school’s consuming demands; law school anxiety and stress; competition, and the prospective (or lack of prospective) job market, all affect, and perhaps negatively affect, law student mental health.  These issues are all compounded by the stigma attached to “others.”

At law schools, we still deal with the student as a person, a pre-professional.  As Scott Fruehwald noted in a posting on the importance of professional identity training, law school is a prime time of both crisis and potential growth if students are well-guided.  However, as Louis Schulze noted on the Faculty Lounge Blog, “Ask not what you can do for your students, ask what your students can do for themselves,” students have to come by their learning as well as their personal identity ultimately on their own.  Being responsible for one’s own learning, being responsible for one’s well-being, and being responsible for gaining and keeping sobriety are ultimately not things that are externally controlled.

Recognizing there is a problem and that we cannot solve it by mandating compliance, what are some things we can do so that our students are open to and can achieve their own stability and appropriate level of sobriety?   What can we provide that students can themselves use? The ABA Health Kit has some suggestions worth noting here.  For example, it suggests:

1.       Think about the problem; create and have a strategy; make students aware; reduce stigma so students will take make use of the strategies, and follow through. Make the issues and assistance “present.”

2.       Provide and encourage Lawyers Assistance Program access;

3.       Have an on-campus counselor;

4.       Limited self-disclosure. Most Anonymous Meetings begin with, “Hi, I’m (name), and I’m (whatever the concern).  For anyone who has ever been to one of these meetings – and, yes, I have been in celebration – the mere existence of others similarly situated is itself very powerful. 

5.       Provide links and access to resources – many of which can be found in the Health Kit, others of which can be found in Scott’s article, through the ABA or your state bar, through various mental health advocacy  and disability advocacy sites or through any Anonymous site.  There are even NA and AA meeting locator apps.

6.       Learn about and provide guidance for gaining and maintaining a healthy life.

The Health Kit also notes some other things law schools have done or are already doing to promote wellness.  Those include providing access to a mental health professional and then, coordinating with student affairs to create various programs (plural) throughout the year to introduce that person and then create occasions for students to interact with that person such as “let’s talk,” or “how to bounce back,” events. 

Other ideas include Family Fun Day; Wellness Fair or Wellness Day with structured events including speakers from the local LAP, strategies for time management, diets, as well as activities such as yoga, resiliency training, and chair massages.  (I admit to liking this last.)  Some schools, ours included, have had “Puppy Love” opportunities – most recently here as a stress-reliever before the bar exam.  (Hypo-allergenic only)

On the more serious side, some schools have integrated LAP programs or one credit “courses” throughout the curriculum with a different focus each year.  Two possible syllabi are included near the end of the Health Kit, one by Marjoire A. Silver from Touro Law Center, and one prepared by the ABA CLAP.

Law Student mental health, substance abuse and addiction are personal to me.  I cannot tell you the number of students who have passed through my doors over the decades who were and are vulnerable.  What are other schools doing?  Do you have plans? Programs? Access?  Course work you would share?  Other?

 

Looking Beyond the Trends: Who’s Our Curriculum Really For?

Just catching up on my summer reading and I came across a short piece titled, “My Best Marketing Advice for Lawyers,” by John H. Fisher, Esq.  In the article, Attorney Fisher responds to an inquiry for his best marketing advice by saying: “Identify your ‘Ideal Client’ and nurture and cultivate the relationship with your Ideal Client through a series of educational and informative newsletters, speaking events, books, and social events.” 1  This three-step plan: paint a picture of your ideal client, attract your ideal client, and nurture the relationship with your ideal client was clear, linear, and supported with some truly clever and constructive examples of providing best tips and advice – for your referral partners. The article concludes that this plan has the power to change law practices, create goodwill, and perhaps make the actor a “mini-celebrity among peers.”  Apropos of the previous blog, such advice seems consistent.  And, to be fair to Mr. Fisher given what follows, he was posed the question, and we are still in the post “failing” law school phase.

 

Two of several things that give me pause here, are in who is assumed to be the “ideal” client and how we are affecting our students’ priorities when we offer and even encourage them to take “law” school courses in economic trends in the legal profession and personal finance.  The apparent underlying assumption of both articles is that the “ideal” client is someone who will financially advantage the lawyer, and/or that the wealth of our profession and ourselves is worthy of credit in a school devoted to the study of law. Understanding that making a living is important, I’d note that there are no major stories about whether lawyers make a “living wage” either here2 or in other nations, or of lawyers who cobble together several jobs over the long-term to support themselves or a family.  But I did, however, recently listen at a ceremony where the head of a non-law institute spoke eloquently about the goal of that educational institution as doing justice and having their faculty involved in field-work toward helping others establish workable justice systems.  Non-lawyers.

 

Whenever students struggle with understanding a statute or regulation and where I sense a disconnect, I encourage asking who benefits from a policy or something being advocated.  Then, recognizing how easy it is to go along with an idea that is being advocated when it is self-benefitting, I encourage students to ask who is left out and, if appropriate, why we continue to allow others’ priorities to be that determinative.

In 1984, I was 33 years old. I was arrogant, judgmental, narcissistic and very full of myself. I was not as interested in justice as I was in winning. To borrow a phrase from Al Pacino in the movie “And Justice for All,” “Winning became everything.” ….

Had I been more inquisitive, perhaps the evidence would have come to light years ago. But I wasn’t, and my inaction contributed to the miscarriage of justice in this matter. . . .

My mindset was wrong and blinded me to my purpose of seeking justice, rather than obtaining a conviction of a person who I believed to be guilty. I did not hide evidence, I simply did not seriously consider that sufficient information may have been out there that could have led to a different conclusion. And that omission is on me.

  • Marty Stroud – March 2015 – Apology to Glenn Ford and to the justice system

Although we may have “second chances,” none of us can undo what has already been done. All of our actions and inactions have consequences – whether immediately or decades from now – that cannot be re-spooled.

Law students learn (hopefully) early on that the law provides remedies which, for the most part, merely substitute for what has been lost whether limbs, rights, freedoms, or life. And in some cases, there are wrongs that simply cannot be remedied. Sometimes, the best we can offer is an apology. The apology offered by prosecutor Marty Shroud to Glenn Ford is sincere; the author proffers no excuses and takes full responsibility for his own acts and omissions – and we should expect no less. I hope Mr. Shroud’s apology reminds those of us in legal education to pay attention to the mindset of our students and to challenge as well as guide them to better develop their professional consciences, mindful of the potential for causing lasting harm and their larger obligation to the legal system.

As educators, the first challenge is to admit when we ourselves are wrong, that we don’t have all of the answers, that the premises upon which we make our arguments can be flawed or judgmental, and that we don’t know everything. The second challenge is to help our law students learn the same. And, law school makes this challenge profoundly difficult for law students. Think about it. Nearly everything depends on “doing well” relative to others in law school – on performance and achievement by mastering content. Many law school and career opportunities depend on doing better than the next person. In a time of “personal truth” and “confirmation bias,” pushing students to take a sincere personal inventory can seem nearly impossible. In a more practical sense, teaching students how to admit mistakes and to take responsibility for those mistakes is difficult. I’m pretty sure there’s no grading rubric or assessment with columns for “makes mistakes,” or “admits to those mistakes” in the larger profession- and life-sense. And, while assigned reflective pieces may encourage students toward more honest personal assessment, those types of assignments are generally not in the mainstream podium classes.

A further impediment to meeting these challenges is what seems to me to be an almost embedded professional cultural insistence that admitting mistakes is a sign of weakness – as though only those who are never wrong are strong. This apology, however, is a singular example of potential change. The apology was forthright; it was both personal and made to the general public at a time when the public is particularly critical of our legal system. As a teacher, I hope my students are able to learn from this letter and remain mindful of the potential for inattentiveness, hubris, and the resulting harm not only to others, but to our entire justice system when we lose sight of the larger picture.

Wishing students success on the bar exam

The Bar Exam is upcoming. And with it comes heightened stress and potential for students, but also an odd chance for diverging interests between a small number of students and their law schools.

Bar exam homonyms: high stakes; gateway, leveler, stressor, useless unnecessary burden after three years of school, fee generator, standardizing, and proficiency. I’m sure “bar exam” conjures up many more thoughts and meanings for others. For law students, the impact of this exam is wide-ranging. Most graduates spend months of intensive study preparing for the bar exam. They incur additional debt for these review courses; they devote months of their lives to study intensively for the exam. Exam passage marks the entree into our profession with all of its benefits and burdens. Exam passage allows our graduates to practice law and makes more likely their getting and keeping a job sooner rather than later.

While for individual students, we provide encouragement, cajoling, and hope for exam success, their exam success has an additional impact on us. For law schools, the bar exam is a factor in accreditation and in reputation. The ABA accreditation standards require a law school to meet a bar pass requirement that can be done in one of two ways: “either by showing that 75 percent of its graduates who took the bar exam in at least three of the previous five years passed or by showing that its graduates’ first-time bar pass rate was no more than 15 points below the average bar pass rate for ABA-approved schools in states where its graduates took the bar.” The ABA, this spring, did not follow through on a proposal that would have increased the passage percent rate requirement from 75 to 80 percent. This connection to accreditation, while arguably standardizing law schools, can recast student success on the bar exam from an individual achievement and triumph to an institutional success or failure.

Therein lies a challenge for a small number of students – reconciling the individual student’s path toward bar exam success with institutional markers of success. Where one student may benefit from repeated attempts at taking the exam, gaining familiarity and comfort and so easing stress that inhibits success, the student’s school must count that student’s learning process as a “failure” against institutional success and reputation. To foster institutional reputation, encouraging some students to wait to take the bar exam seems a good path; on the other hand, for the student who would benefit from the exposure, supporting the student’s decision to take and re-take may be the better path for the student even if not for the institution. A delicate balance is needed when we approach those students who are at risk of not passing the bar exam.

Of course, student success or failure arises from many factors, and the choice to take the exam in the face of difficulties is the graduate’s. It’s also worth remembering that many famous people did not pass the bar exam on their first try including President Franklin D. Roosevelt, First Lady Michelle Obama, and even Supreme Court Justice Benjamin Cardozo. So, I’m going to encourage all of our students to know themselves, to work as hard as they can in the way that works best for them, and of course: wish all students success on the bar exam.