Demystifying the First Year: A Guide to the 1L Experience.

Demystifying the First Year: A Guide to the 1L Experience. by Albert J. Moore, David A. Binder
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Format:
  • Author(s): Albert J. Moore David A. Binder
  • Media: Paperback
  • Pages: 192
  • Publish Date: 09/17/2009
  • Publication Frequency: N/A
  • Offer Number/PIN: 0735584494
  • ISBN: 9780735584495
  • ETA: Available: Item ships in 3-5 Business Days
  • Product Line: Aspen Publishers
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Demystifying the First Year of Law School: A Guide to the 1L Experience provides law students with explicit frameworks for reading and analyzing court opinions in all first year courses. Using hypothetical classroom dialogues, the book explains how these frameworks will help student understand and participate in classroom discussions, answer questions on exams, and use the skills learned in the first year when representing clients in practice.

Unraveling the mysteries of the first year of law school, authors Moore and Binder provide

  • clear definitions, along with concrete examples, of the two types of legal issues typically addressed in court opinions
  • illustrations of the six types of arguments routinely used by courts, lawyers and professors to resolve legal issues. These illustrations should help students understand a court's rationale for its decision and help students make legal arguments on exams and in practice
  • a straightforward explanation for the use of the question-and-answer format in first year classrooms, with numerous illustrative examples of hypothetical in-class dialogues
  • a step-by-step approach for briefing court opinions in preparation for class, along with a companion website with illustrative examples of case briefs of court opinions in subjects addressed in first year courses

Written by top scholars drawing on their experience as authors and educators, Demystifying the First Year of Law School: A Guide to the 1L Experience, gives the benefit of experience to the uninitiated. It's ideal as a companion to any first year course, as a text in a legal methods or academic support course, or as background for a law school orientation program. A Teacher's Manual is available at www/aspenlawschool.com/books/moorebinder.

* This book is also available in eBook format at the Kindle Store

Chapter 1. Introduction

Part I: Legal Rule Application

Chapter 2. Legal Rules, Legal Categories, and Issue Spotting
Chapter 3. Issue Spotting in a Rule Application Case: Illustrative Examples
Chapter 4. Six Types of Legal Arguments Commonly Employed in Rule Application Cases
Chapter 5. Reading Rule Application Opinions in Preparation for Class: Preparing a Case “Brief”
Chapter 6. Rule Application Opinions in the Classroom: Facts, Issues, Arguments, and Legal Rules
Chapter 7. Rule Application Opinions in the Classroom: Critiquing a Court’s Arguments
Chapter 8. Rule Application Opinions in the Classroom: What Constitutes a Holding
Chapter 9. Rule Application Opinions in the Classroom: Making Arguments to Resolve New Issues
Chapter 10. Rule Application Opinions: Classroom Dynamics and Note Taking

Part II: Legal Rule Creation: Creating Broadly Applicable New Legal Rules

Chapter 11. Reading Rule Creation Opinions in Preparation for Class: Preparing a Case “Brief”
Chapter 12. Rule Creation Opinions in the Classroom
Chapter 13. Rule Application and Rule Creation in a Single Opinion

Part III: Arguments Revisited, Judicial Decision Making, and Client Counseling

Chapter 14. Arguments Revisited
Chapter 15. Choosing Between Competing Arguments: The Subjective Nature of Judicial Decisions
Chapter 16. Helping Clients Make Decisions: Arguments Beyond the Court Room

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Albert J. Moore

Albert J. Moore teaches Trial Advocacy and Depositions and Discovery in the Clinical Program, which he helped pioneer. He has received both a University Distinguished Teaching Award and the UCLA School of Law's Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching.

Before joining UCLA, Professor Moore was a business litigator at the Los Angeles firms of Riordan & McKinzie and Nossaman, Krueger & Marsh.

Professor Moore writes on developing systematic approaches to teaching persuasive trial and deposition strategies and techniques. His publications include, Demystifying the First Year of Law School (with David Binder), Deposition Questioning Strategies and Techniques (2001) (with David Binder and Paul Bergman), Nolo's Deposition Handbook (2nd ed., 2001) (with Paul Bergman), and Trial Advocacy: Inferences, Arguments, Techniques (1996) (with David Binder and Paul Bergman).


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David A. Binder

Photo - David A. BinderDavid Binder is a pioneer in developing clinical methods of teaching law. He currently teaches Civil Procedure and Depositions and Discovery in Complex Litigation. He is a recipient of both the University's Distinguished Teaching Award and the School of Law's Rutter Award for Excellence in Teaching; and after only two years at UCLA, the Class of 1972 elected him Professor of the Year. In 2001, the School of Law honored him with a special award commemorating his thirty years of dedication to clinical legal education.

Before joining the School of Law, Professor Binder was a partner in the law firm of Brown & Brown in Los Angeles and served as director of litigation for the Western Center on Law and Poverty between 1969 and 1970. He has spent several summers teaching introductory courses on American law at various universities in China.

Professor Binder has published pioneering clinical scholarship, including several books with Professors Albert Moore and Paul Bergman that grow out of his focus on fact development and its relation to inferential proof and argument at trial, including Demystifying The First Year of Law School with Albert J. Moore (2009), Deposition Questioning Strategies and Techniques (2001), and Trial Advocacy: Inferences, Arguments, Techniques (1996). He also co-authored Lawyers as Counselors: A Client Centered Approach (2nd Edition) with Professor Paul Bergman, Susan Price, and Paul Tremblay of Boston College Law School (2004).