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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
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We know that the upcoming AASE Annual Conference is going to be like our Vegas location: bold and full of excitement! As a special priority of the planning committee, we wanted to make sure we incorporated timely topics that are of interest to us in legal education, professional licensure, and academic support/achievement. So we are doing a second call for proposals – this time for HOT TOPICS! We are specifically soliciting proposals that are of a timely nature and will be slotted for approximately 30 minutes in the conference schedule.
The proposal submission form opened on Monday, March 9th and proposals are due by Friday, March 20th at 11:59 p.m.
This is an excellent opportunity for any member – seasoned, new, or somewhere in between – to share your knowledge about the timely topics that we are all facing. Please submit a proposal and share your knowledge with us.
Please check the AASE Newsletter or your AASE emails for how to submit.
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
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I recently attended a brief presentation on Ai as it relates legal writing and research courses. Post presentation generated a robust discussion about observations of Ai use in the classroom. Most of the discussion centered on students’ use of Ai to quickly find answers when called upon in class. I sensed a lot of fear and dismay during this discussion, but yet not many answers.
Fears may cause faculty to tighten class policies like restricting computer use or penalizing students for lack of preparedness. But maybe there is a more open-minded way to incorporate Ai into the classroom. Perhaps a way that fosters learning and helps meet our students where they are on their journey.
Cue “Ai vs. Non-Ai Classroom Challenge” lesson plans:
These lessons could be done in a few ways, but the goal is to foster open dialogues about the use of Ai in the classroom, see how it turns out and as the instructor be open to the idea that Ai might harm or help your students.
The theory I want to test for lesson one is, “Do Ai systems truly assist unprepared students during class?” My inclination is no, but I’ll report back when I run this lesson to see if the test proves otherwise.
Here is lesson one’s structure:
Step 1: Remind students in advance to bring their laptops to class. When it is time to review the cases for the day – split the classroom.
Step 2: At the start of the lesson announce; (1) there will be no penalty to students that select the “Ai Group” and no reward for students that select the “Non-Ai Group” and, (2) re-explain that this is a learning experience to evaluate Ai for everyone in the class, including you as the instructor.
Step 3: Prompt students to self-select into the “Non-Ai Group” or the “Ai Group.”
Step 4: Debrief a case with the “Non-Ai Group” and the “Ai Group” as you normally would. Students in the “Non-Ai Group” are permitted to respond to your questions using their notes, case briefs, and text for class. Students in the “Ai Group” are only permitted to enter your question prompts when called upon and can only respond with the Ai generated response – nothing more (even if they prepared for class).
Step 5: Evaluate. What strengths and areas for improvement did the “Non-Ai Group” have in debriefing the cases versus the Ai Group? How might this change students’ considerations of using Ai during class? Be open to the students’ thoughts and input and provide some of your own observations too.
A few weeks later, run lesson two:
Step 1 through 3 are the same as above except assign a brief recording on best practices in creating practice questions prior to class.
Step 4: Break the “Ai” and “Non-Ai” groups into smaller internal groups (3 – 4 people max)
Step 5: Instruct all groups to create a practice prompt using at least two doctrines covered in class. Non-Ai Groups must draft the questions using class materials and their study materials. Ai Groups can only use their minds and the LMS. Give students thirty minutes to draft and refine their practice questions.
Step 6: Have the “Non-Ai Groups” and “Ai Groups” pair and share their work at the end of class and debrief the findings: What is the same and what is different? What did they learn from this lesson?
Step 7: Ask students to submit their draft questions and provide written or recorded feedback on all practice question prompts. Assess the prompts for accuracy and then debrief your observations of the Non-Ai versus Ai questions at the next class. This lesson promotes feedback loops and collectively explores Ai together. It also helps students understand the importance of testing themselves through practice questions.
I want my students to know that I am consciously aware of the society and professional world they will soon step into as lawyers. Now is the time for us to learn together. As my colleague said earlier this week, “steer into the (Ai) skid.” But Ice Cube said it best, “check yourself before you wreck yourself” which in my case means “test myself before I wreck myself” with unfounded fears about Ai use in the classroom.
(Amy Vaughan-Thomas)
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
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For many minority students, legal academia and the bar exam can be isolating and is often coupled with the mental gymnastics of battling systemic inequalities, generational trauma, and the quiet yet persistent questions that linger: Will I get in to law school? How will I pay for law school? Will I feel like I belong there? Will I pass the bar exam? It is in this space where the culmination of doubt and determination breeds the need for better representation of minorities in legal academia. However, considering the current political landscape of the United States and the legal community’s shifting position on the importance of representation of minorities, marginalized individuals, and other underrepresented populations, it is crucial now more than ever to remind our legal institutions of why it became necessary for policies to be put in place to ensure these populations would be seen, heard, and valued in spaces they would not have otherwise have access to.
D**, also known as DEI, or better known as diversity, equity, and inclusion are principles that work together to foster fair, respectful, and supportive environments for individuals from all backgrounds to live, work, and exist together[1]. Diversity, equity, and inclusion gained traction in the late 80s when the civil rights movement began to push for research on how to cultivate and manage diversity in the workplace, id. This birthed affirmative action which required industries to hire diverse candidates to create opportunities for underrepresented individuals[2]. At its inception, affirmative action was a bipartisan policy enacted to mitigate the consequences of racial and systematic inequities existing in the workplace and higher education.[3] Decades later however, the social and political landscape of the United States has seemingly shifted as it relates to affirmative action. The same industries that once prided themselves on believing in the need to have a diverse and well-represented workforce have since overturned their policies that once gave marginalized populations access to careers or educational opportunities. It did not help that there were executive orders put in place by the current administration and requisite court decisions. As we have seen since then, legal academia was not left unscathed.
On May 9, 2025, the American Bar Association (ABA), publicly announced that its Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar voted to extend the suspension of Standard 206, or what would be considered its “DEI clause”. Standard 206 was first suspended in February of 2025.[4]Prior to its suspension, Standard 206 stated:
(a) Consistent with sound legal education policy and the Standards, a law school shall demonstrate by concrete action a commitment to diversity and inclusion by providing full opportunities for the study of law and entry into the profession by members of underrepresented groups, particularly racial and ethnic minorities, and a commitment to having a student body that is diverse with respect to gender, race, and ethnicity.
(b) Consistent with sound educational policy and the Standards, a law school shall demonstrate by concrete action a commitment to diversity and inclusion by having a faculty and staff that are diverse with respect to gender, race, and ethnicity.[5]
In essence, Standard 206 once required law schools to be inclusive of members of underrepresented groups even if it meant admitting students based on their race and ethnicity to ensure that students from those minority backgrounds would have access to “full educational opportunities”. This indicated that there was an understanding and agreement from the ABA and the leadership of the Department of Education that underrepresented students do not always have the privilege to access higher and quality educational opportunities due to oppression and other systemic inequities. As such, to combat these systemic inequities, or to “level the playing field”, it was once an important societal norm to include such policies to guarantee privileges to minority students who would not have otherwise been afforded them.
Additionally, the verbiage of Standard 206 provided that a “sound legal education” is one that composes of “enrollment of a diverse student body that promotes cross-cultural understanding, and helps break down racial, ethnic, and gender stereotypes, and enables students to better understand persons of different backgrounds”. This then presents more concerns of what type of legal education will minority students receive moving forward if there is no rule in place to ensure representation of their diverse cultures, experiences, and backgrounds. Moreover, this brings forth the concern of whether this will further deter minority students from wanting to even pursue a legal education.
According to the American Bar Association (ABA), from 2009-2016, the overall number of black men enrolling at accredited U.S. law schools dropped 9.4% and 4.9% for black women. [6] Further, from 2013-2016, despite being known to “graduate more black lawyers than any other law school apart from Howard University School of Law, Harvard Law School experienced a drop in black 1L enrollment from 10.4% to 5.9%, id. It is important to also note the seminal case Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College and Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. University of North Carolina et al 600 U.S. 181 (2023)[7], where the United States Supreme Court struck down Harvard University and the University of North Carolina’s use of race as metric for admission as a violation to the 14th Amendment Equal Protection Clause. This case created a domino effect and ended affirmative action in this manner altogether. It also further pushed the rhetoric that certain demographics do not need to be given “special treatment” simply because of their race. Although the Court mentions that an applicant may still be admitted if their experiences with racism shaped their path to college, this in my opinion, is essentially the reason race-conscious admission was enacted to begin with. Affirmative Action and race-based initiatives in hiring and admission to college were enacted due to said racist experiences and inequities. Lastly, the Court points out that there are numerous other institutions who have already stopped using race-based admissions for years, however, the Court still fails to note that these institutions then did a complete overhaul by implementing other initiatives that broke down systemic barriers that were placed in front of individuals of a certain race. As such, it is now illegal to hire, admit, or place higher value on individuals who have endured centuries worth injustices due to their race. The illegality of D** has been painted as way to level the playing field of all races, ethnicities, genders, and ability, however, very seldomly have there been other ways in which there is acknowledgement of systemic inequities posed on minorities and marginalized communities and caveat-like actions to combat them.
With the current backlash on diversity, equity, and inclusion policies in legal academia and the broader country, one can only hope that minorities and underrepresented individuals in legal academia remain dedicated to simply showing up and fostering meaningful relationships and contributions to the institutions we value. Additionally, one can only hope that underrepresented students will continue to pursue a legal education with passion, confidence, and unmitigated fervor despite the disparaging headlines.
[1] Ronnie de Souza Santos et al, From Diverse Origins to a DEI Crisis: The Pushback Against Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (2025).
[2] M. Russen and M.Dawson, Which should come first? Examining diversity, equity, and inclusion.
International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management. 25 (2023).
[3] Natasha Warikoo, The Demise of Affirmative Action in College Admissions, Annual Reviews of Sociology
[4] American Bar Association, Council of the ABA Section of Legal Education extends Standard 206 suspension to 2026, Americanbar.org, https://www.americanbar.org/news/abanews/aba-news-archives/2025/05/aba-council-extends-206-suspension/ (last visited October 3, 2025).
[5]ABA Standards and Rules. Chapter 2. Standard 206.
https://www.americanbar.org/content/dam/aba/administrative/legal_education_and_admissions_to_the_bar/standards/2024-2025/2024-2025-standards-chapter-2.pdf
[6] https://clp.law.harvard.edu/knowledge-hub/magazine/issues/where-are-black-lawyers-today/the-education-of-black-lawyers/
[7] Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard Coll., 600 U.S. 181 (2023) (consolidated with Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. Univ. of N.C., No. 21‑707)
Guest Blogger: Jima Fahnbulleh, Associate Director of Academic and Bar Success, Indiana University Robert H. McKinney School of Law
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Posted By Administration,
Tuesday, March 3, 2026
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Brittany Raposa’s recent published book “Fostering First Gen Success: A Guide for Law Schools” hit the stands a few weeks ago. Brittany has been involved in our field for over ten years and during this time has written several pieces and served in leadership roles in our field, all the while adventuring into motherhood, raising two young children. Today’s question & answer post serves to spotlight her accomplishments and allow others to learn from her success.
Question: What motivated you to write this book?
Answer: I was a first-generation law student—the first in my family to graduate high school, let alone college or law school. During my time in law school, I was often in “fight-or-flight” mode, anxious about whether I was keeping up, and constantly worried about being academically dismissed. I remember hearing whispers that people like me didn’t make it through law school, and at times it felt as if faculty doubted me too. Looking back, it’s hard to tell whether that was reality or imposter syndrome—but probably a bit of both.
This book is my response to that experience. I wrote it to urge law schools to recognize these challenges and, more importantly, to offer guidance and practical strategies so first-generation students don’t have to feel alone, confused, or filled with self-doubt. My goal is to help law schools foster an environment where students like me can thrive—not just survive.
Question: How do you manage your work responsibilities while also becoming a parent?
Answer: To be honest, I’m still figuring this out and learning every day. Managing work while becoming a parent is definitely a challenge. I try to approach it with intentionality: setting boundaries around my time, prioritizing what truly matters each day, and being realistic about what I can accomplish. Flexibility is important. I’ve learned to adjust my expectations, knowing that some days parenting demands more attention than work.
My stubborn self has also learned to ask for support—from my partner, family, and colleagues—and accepting help without guilt. It’s the guilt that chips away at me sometimes. But I’ve realized that “doing it all” does not mean doing everything perfectly, but rather being present and intentional in both roles. Being a mom has taught me patience, perspective, and creativity, which actually has helped me in my work.
Question: How do you make time to write?
Answer: Sometimes, after I finish a writing project, I ask myself: “How did I even do this?” But, when I think about it, I think I just set aside dedicated blocks of time, often early in the morning or late at night, when I know I can focus without distractions. Even small, consistent writing sessions add up over time. I also love writing, which helps. I remind myself why I’m writing: the impact I hope this work can have on others keeps me motivated.
Question: How did you secure this book opportunity?
Answer: I had the idea to write this book when I worked as a bar support professional in a law school. As a first-generation law student and law professor, I recognized a gap in guidance for students like me and really wanted to address it. I developed a proposal that outlined the book’s purpose, audience, and impact, and I reached out to publishers. I put myself out there, but I had never done anything like this before. I was really nervous, but I’m so happy I did it.
Question: What is one piece of advice you wish to share will our community as it pertains to career building?
Answer: I think it’s so important to lean into your unique perspective and experiences. Your background is a strength, regardless of what others think about it. Bring that authenticity into your work, put yourself out there, and remember: you are your best self. Approaching your career with that mindset helps quiet the voices of doubt—ones I know from experience can get very loud. Trust your voice and let it guide your career.
In the coming weeks, Brittany will be hosting a series of roundtables with other authors that contributed to this book. More information will be shared with our community once those roundtables are scheduled. Bravo to everyone that worked on this book’s and well done, Brittany!
(Amy Vaughan-Thomas)
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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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Another bar cycle is behind us. The post-bar adrenaline drop is real.
The weeks leading up to the exam are always intense—strategy meetings, one-on-ones, workshops, essay feedback, data tracking, encouragement emails sent late at night. Academic support professionals carry a unique kind of responsibility during bar season. You are coaches, accountability partners, and steady voices in the middle of it all.
Now that the exam has passed, this is your reminder to pause.
Catch your breath.
Academic Success work, specifically supporting bar preparations, often operates in sustained urgency. Students are stressed. Outcomes matter deeply. The calendar compresses. Always, everywhere, all at once, you show up. You are calm, prepared, and relentlessly focused on student success. It is meaningful work, but it is also extremely demanding work.
Take a moment to acknowledge all that you are.
You helped students who doubted themselves sit for a professional licensing exam. You translated doctrine into strategy. You turned panic into actionable plans. Above all, you modeled discipline, resilience, and professionalism.
Not every impact is visible immediately. Some will show up in passing results. Others will show up years later when a former student remembers the person who believed in them when they struggled to believe in themselves.
This period after the exam can feel oddly quiet. The adrenaline fades. The urgency disappears. The inbox slows down. That quiet is not emptiness—it is earned space. Use it.
Reflect on what worked. Release what didn’t. Rest where you can.
Academic success work is long-game work. The relationships you build and the confidence you help students develop extend far beyond a single exam administration. Even when outcomes vary, the effort, care, and professionalism you bring to this role matter profoundly.
It is easy, in this profession, to immediately pivot to the next project. For now, give yourself permission to decompress before ramping up to full speed.
This is just a simple reminder for you.
Your work changes trajectories.
Students often measure success in scores. Institutions measure it in pass rates. Your influence is measured in persistence, self-efficacy, and professional identity formation. It is these outcomes that are harder to quantify but no less significant.
I echo all the voices that have come before mine. Thank you for the care you invest, the rigor you maintain, and most of all, continuing to show up for students during one of the most high-stakes periods of their academic lives.
Take a breath. Hydrate. Sleep. Take a walk that does not involve mentally grading an essay.
Academic support work changes lives. Your worth is reflected in every student who feels seen, supported, and capable because of you. After you take that well-earned rest break, keep going. Your contributions matter more than you know.
Guest Blogger: Lindsay S. Harrington, Director of Bar Support, Associate Professor of Law, University of the Pacific McGeorge School of Law
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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
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When I made the decision to apply for a tenure-track position last summer, I was frankly not sure where to start or what to expect. What I did know was that I needed someone to help me—someone who could help me advocate for myself and be honest when I needed to change course or adjust. Below are some parts of mentor selection and the mentorship process that you may not be aware of, in hopes that it can help you find the right mentor when it is time for you to apply for a faculty position.[1]
- Researching. This part probably took the longest time in the mentor selection process because I was trying to decide between a couple of professors I respect and who I knew would support me in this endeavor. The good news, though, is that whoever you have on your “short list” of mentors will likely be good references for you for the position. As you start to develop that list, make sure that you add people who would be supportive of your transition to faculty, especially if you are applying at schools that you do not presently work at. Of course, your mentor does not have to be from your school, as we have many fine faculty mentors in the ASP/BP community, too.
I would also recommend that you find out whether the mentor you are requesting has participated on a faculty search committee. Having a mentor who is familiar with the faculty search process from developing the job description and metrics to how to give a good job talk presentation are all key things that will help you find a mentor whose background will help in your search[2].
- Asking. Was I ever nervous when I called up this professor to ask them to serve as my mentor. Looking back, I would definitely have practiced this conversation an extra time or two, so I didn’t repeat myself or sound as nervous as I was. Luckily, I had chosen a mentor who I know well and who knows my quirks—so I imagine she was rather forgiving of my nerves.
When asking someone to be your mentor for this process, you should explain your interest in seeking a faculty position, why you are a good fit for the position that you are applying for, and what you hope your mentor will support you with. I suspect that if you did the research phase correctly and outlined your goals, your mentor will be delighted to help you advance your career to the next step after you ask. If they decline the offer, re-evaluate your research phase and try again.
- Learning. Once I selected my faculty mentor—and she’d agreed—, the hard stuff started. Your mentor should help guide you as they review your resume/CV, cover letter, and any other supporting documents required in your application.
After I worked on my resume/CV and cover letter and thought about what my scholarly agenda should include, I sent them over to my mentor. Here, I learned a lot from my mentor over several Zoom calls discussing what was and wasn’t working. This particular process of pulling my initial application materials together took several iterations, so give yourself enough lead time. In fact, as I noted in an earlier blog, I had such a hard time making my cover letter sing until it was pointed out to me that I needed to do legal analysis with it.
Finding a mentor who can give you the hard facts on the materials you have prepared is so important. Hearing “This cover letter just seems very general and doesn’t really make you stand out,” can make you feel deflated—as it did me (even if just for a moment). But my mentor was so patient with me; we started just talking about the things I had done and what made me shine in my current role, and as we talked, the pieces really started to come together. So not only should your mentor be able to tell you what you (maybe) don’t want to hear, but they should also be patient and supportive of your learning in this process, just like we are with our students.
- Practicing. If after all of the hard work on the front end—finding a mentor, writing application materials, and submitting your application—you find yourself with the fantastic opportunity for interviews, your mentor can also provide valuable support for interviewing and job talks. They can give you insight into the types of questions you might see, input on how to structure your job talk (especially if you need to balance ASP/BP topics with your scholarly agenda), and they will likely offer to moot your job talk.
I found getting advice on my job talk from my mentor (and others I ended up listing as references) very helpful. While this is perhaps a story for a later blog post, I will briefly share that for my first job talk moot, I made such very bland slides because I thought that I should. When my mentor saw this, she pushed back because she knew it was not my style—so I changed my deck to be more engaging (which was the right decision). As you work with your mentor and other references to prepare for your job talk, make sure to get feedback on the whole process—presentation style, timing, slide style, language on the slides, ability to answer questions, and demeanor.
The advice and guidance my mentor provided me truly made me a better applicant and I could not be more grateful to her. I hope that in your upcoming job search, you can find my experience searching for and working with my mentor helpful—and that you find your own supportive mentor to help you reach your goals!
(Erica M. Lux)
[1] A huge resource that also helped me get started in the process, with some example materials, was the AALS “Becoming a Law Teacher” website—highly recommend you also get familiar with it.
[2] For obvious reasons, you will probably want to speak with your faculty mentor and/or your Dean and administrative leadership if you are applying in house. There could be some key conflict of interest issues regarding mentors and references that you need to work through, or they may alert you to other factors to be aware of.
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday, February 12, 2026
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday, February 12, 2026
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I teach Legal Methods in the spring semester. In my school, Legal Methods is a required course for 1L students who did not perform well academically in their fall semester. For many of them, this is their last chance to stay in law school.
Unsurprisingly, part of my role in teaching the class is to help students navigate a variety of emotions as they process being in my class. Something I often come back to with students is what success in law school means. We know that law school is filled with visible markers of achievement: grades, class rank, law review, clerkships, offers, and bar passage. While these milestones matter, they can quietly crowd out the more important individual question of what success means to each student.
When students measure themselves only against external benchmarks, they may achieve impressive credentials while feeling disconnected, burned out, or uncertain about their own goals. Alternatively, students may miss the external marks and feel disheartened and uncertain about whether they belong.
Academic support professionals are uniquely positioned to help students define success in a way that is both personally meaningful and professionally sustainable. Here are some things I keep in mind as I navigate these conversations with students:
1. Widen Traditional Narratives of Success
Many students arrive with an implicit script, including top grades, prestigious internships, elite employers. While those paths are valid, they are not the only versions of success. Naming this openly helps students see that there are many fulfilling legal careers, and career paths are rarely linear (mine certainly wasn’t!). Additionally, students should recognize that prestige is different from fulfillment. By widening the narrative of “success,” we give students permission to explore what actually aligns with their values.
2. Separate Performance from Worth
High-achieving environments can blur the line between how students perform and how they see themselves. A bad exam becomes a statement about identity. A missed opportunity becomes a referendum on belonging.
Academic support can help students practice language and thinking that separates what happened (a performance outcome) from who I am (a capable, growing professional). This distinction supports resilience and reduces the emotional weight attached to every data point.
3. Encourage Values-Based Goal Setting
Often, I find myself asking students only, “What kind of job do you want?” However, this closes the discussion. Instead, I try to be deliberate about asking questions like:
- What kind of lawyer do you want to be?
- What kind of life do you want your career to support?
- What values do you want your work to reflect?
This also works when narrowed to the academic setting. Rather than assuming every student wants a 4.0, asking students why they came to law school and what experiences they want to have while here can help shift the conversation from grades to values. And, values-based conversations help students connect daily effort to long-term meaning, making motivation more intrinsic and sustainable.
4. Normalize Changing Definitions of Success
What success looks like in 1L year may not match what it looks like in 3L year, or five years into practice. Students should know that redefining success is not failure; it’s growth. We can model this by sharing nonlinear career stories, alumni paths that have changed over time, and examples of lawyers who recalibrated their priorities. Flexibility in goals is a professional strength that we can start to normalize early in law school.
5. Teach Students to Track Personal Wins
Not all progress shows up on transcripts. Encourage students to notice the non-grade-based wins, such as improved time management; greater confidence in class; stronger analysis; healthier boundaries; or an increased willingness to seek feedback. These are all skills students should be developing in law school, and tracking these wins helps students see growth that grades may not capture.
Helping students develop a personal definition of success doesn’t mean ignoring institutional benchmarks. It means placing them in a broader, healthier context. When students define success on their own terms – grounded in values, growth, and professional identity – they are more likely to persist through challenges, make intentional choices, and build careers that feel meaningful.
Academic support plays a powerful role in helping students ask and answer the most important question of all: What does success look like for me?
(Dayna Smith)
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Posted By Administration,
Thursday, February 12, 2026
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While debriefing a case the other day, one of my students said, “this case would make a great movie.” The class laughed and I agreed – action, pain, crazy lawyer antics, and greed all wrapped into one film.
You may have seen presentations before about using legal movies as a teaching tool. One of my law school Professors would use “My Cousin Vinny” clips to teach evidence. It was an excellent visual aid and an innovative way to engage our class.
My student’s comment and my memories from evidence motivated me to use Ai to create a video short this week. I limited my Ai use to free trials so this post in no way serves to endorse one program over another (unless someone from these programs is reading this blog and wants to send some upgraded subscriptions my way).
I started with a simple prompt into ChatGPT, “Please make me a video that depicts an auto-accident.” In hindsight, the prompt was too simple, and the robot’s response let me know that (thanks Robot). Now, the free ChatGPT cannot generate videos, but it did generate two options which could enhance our classrooms.
The first option was a visual storyboard. The robot provided a visual storyboard, a vision board if you will, that you could use to improve your slides or hypothetical storytelling in the classroom.
The second option was a ready-to-paste cinematic Ai video prompt with a referral to Ai video tools (Runway, Pika, Luma or Sora-style generators). The prompt provided, “A realistic daytime urban intersection. Two standard sedans approach from perpendicular directions. One vehicle enters the intersection late, causing a low-speed side-impact collision. No injuries visible. Cars come to rest. Drivers exit vehicles. Police lights appear in the distance. Neutral, educational tone. Cinematic camera movement, realistic physics.”
I chose to use the free version of Runway to test the prompt. After copying and pasting the cinematic prompt instructions, I was happy to see that the free trial of Runway produced a ten second video that sufficed to meet the needs for use in a classroom. An upgraded version could produce longer videos and allow for more Ai editing within the video itself.
Inserting a few cinematic clips based on your own prompts can help break up a dense lecture and is a great way to get students to creatively engage in written analysis. Instead of a written hypothetical prompt, try a visual depiction followed by a short writing prompt. The prep for this activity also only took five minutes, which is far less time than I would spend watching a legal movie (which may have problematic screenplay depictions of bias and stereotyping) to find certain teaching points. I hope today’s post serves to push your creative content wheels – happy “filmmaking.”
(Amy Vaughan-Thomas)
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Posted By Administration,
Monday, February 9, 2026
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I actually uttered these words at my aqua aerobics class.
I have probably written about my fitness with octogenarians class in the past, but for the last two weeks, I have been working on convincing my water buddies that Bad Bunny is actually very good and quite clearly not a rabbit. This may have been the most difficult teaching I have done recently-and I am teaching an Intro. to Con. Law class to international LL.M. students this semester. I live in New England where even harmless looking seniors in old fashioned bathing caps[1] have strong opinions about football and halftime shows. Especially this year-but no more on that: it is too soon.
They had heard there was controversy about the choice of Bad Bunny to perform at Super Bowl LX[2]. So, I asked them what they had heard. They had heard a bunch of things that were the talking points from the loud –but inaccurate– folks out there who seem to forget that Puerto Rico is part of the United States. They had heard that his music was full of hate. But they hadn’t even listened because it was in Spanish. I told them that he was a champion of women, fervently against ICE, and (I know my crowd), just an adorable young man. His current–grammy winning–hit even talks about playing dominos with his grandfather (Ey, hoy voy a estar con abuelo to’l día, jugando dominó[3]).
These people are retired doctors, lawyers, nurses, and high level administrators; folks who had stayed in the area after graduating from Harvard or MIT. They are older but also wiser people who are well educated and fascinating to talk to-and yet, they believed the pre-packaged story about Bad Bunny. They were, to their credit, taken aback about who had manufactured the packaging when told, but if these folks could believe things without firsthand knowledge, I have to wonder about what our students “know.”
I think we, as law educators, have to remind students not to believe everything they hear. Curiosity is a valuable tool as a law student and more so as a lawyer. I think we also have to remind students to not bad mouth themselves–to themselves– and then believe the bad hype they have self-generated. Interrupting this narrative loop is crucial to success as well. We can help students look for other metrics or even just share better information[4]. Asking questions is a strength not a weakness.
As someone deep in Patriots’ territory, I can say that Bad Bunny’s performance was the best part of the Super Bowl. He warmed up a very cold night with a simple idea, “…hate gets more powerful with more hate. The only thing that is more powerful than hate is love.[5]” The wedding during the show was real love on national display.[6]
My next instructional hurdle: getting them to love Zohran.
(Liz Stillman)
[1] https://nanaswhimsies.com/tag/esther-williams/
[2] Can we talk about how many students may only know roman numerals from football sometime??
[3] From Debí Tirar Más Fotos
[4] I also worry that students will look for and find alternative sources of information that some will tell them is better but isn’t the main show like those who sponsored a second halftime show.
[5] Bad Bunny at the Grammy’s, 2/2/26.
[6] https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/music/music-news/bad-bunny-couple-married-super-bowl-halftime-show-1236500136/
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Posted By Administration,
Monday, February 9, 2026
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With the start of a new semester, we start to hear from students (especially first-year students) who did not meet their own expectations. And while an exam review can be helpful for students, reading skills can often be a foundational cause of such challenges and something that a struggling student may not recognize the need to improve.
A law student who struggles with legal reading comprehension also often struggles with critical thinking about what to extract from a case to help them solve a future legal problem.[1] This can then lead to challenges with processing the law (outlining) and applying the law (taking exams).[2] And as Susan Landrum pointed out at her excellent presentation on “The Countdown to the NextGen UBE” at the AALS Annual Meeting, reading is one of those most fundamental skills that will also be key to a student’s success on the NextGen UBE—and one that students coming into law school continue to wrangle with.
For some, the Spring semester can be even more difficult for first-year law students. For example, at our school, students transition from Civil Procedure, Contracts, and Torts in the Fall, to Property, Criminal Law, and Constitutional Law in the Spring—courses we tend to see them face greater reading comprehension challenges in. Additionally, because students are now in their second semester, the same initial skill building that first-semester professors engaged in (whether in doctrinal or academic success courses), may not be as consistently supported in the Spring.
Outlined below are some suggestions for supporting law student reading that can be implemented in your teaching this semester for longer-term returns in student success:
- Give Students Options on How to Prime Their Learning. A student who primes their learning with a supplement can often better understand the context of the case they are about to read.[3] However, in today’s digital age and with students who have demonstrated attention span challenges, alternatives to some of the more traditional book options should be made available. For example, if your school has a subscription to learning supplement libraries, like West Academic or Aspen Learning Library, both include audio lessons. Many students will use these for exam preparation, such as Richard Freer’s Law School Legends Audio (a very popular Civ Pro supplement at our school). However, these can just as easily be repurposed for learning prior to reading a case. Similarly, many bar prep companies offer free law student resources, including overview videos that are mini versions of their bar prep lectures. These videos can be used in the same way to help a student understand a concept, such as the Commerce Clause, before a student starts to read the many opinions in their casebook on the topic.
- Adjust Reading Focus from Fact Summaries to Legal Takeaways. For students who struggle, the process of case briefing can many times result in a fact-heavy recitation of information—something that will help them feel successful in a Socrative dialogue in class but may not seem to directly connect to their outlining or exams. With students who struggled on their exams, I sometimes find it helpful to teach them to focus first on the issue and rule takeaway, then the legal sources and arguments supporting that outcome, and finally the legally relevant facts. Reordering their reading process and takeaways from fact and procedural recitations first can help a student understand that the law (which is what their outline should highlight) is key, while the facts support that outcome (and should show up in their outlines as examples). Not only can this help a student better see that cases are not just wells of facts, but it can also help them see more clearly the legal sources and analysis necessary to solve problems they will inevitably see on exams and in practice.
Given that exam performance may be a symptom of a more foundational skill challenge, such as reading, adapting traditionally proven methods of learning strategies can be helpful as we continue to work with ever-evolving student bodies.
What innovative ways have you found helpful to support law student reading challenges?
(Erica M. Lux)
[1] Patricia Grande Montana, Bridging the Reading Gap in the Law School Classroom, 45 Capital Univ. L. Rev. 433, 446 (2017).
[2] Id.
[3] Michael Hunter Schwartz & Paula J. Manning, Expert Learning for Law Students 65–68 (3d ed. 2018).
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Posted By Administration,
Wednesday, February 4, 2026
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“History repeats itself” is deeply on my mind. Why can’t some individuals acknowledge and learn from past mistakes? As I reflect on the state of our world and catch myself in a spiraling thought, I quickly return to work, focus my energy and make something out of these thoughts.
Perhaps we need to slow things down to learn our mistakes. When I think about my recent work, I notice that I started to slow more and want to share my observations for today’s post. For example, in my second-year skills course, students receive feedback on their essays individually in writing, followed up by a required group recording video, which ends with three specific objectives that the students need to improve and accomplish in their next written piece. Instead of providing individual feedback and expecting the students to review while I move on to the next writing exercise, I’m slowing down and repeating the information through a few different formats and providing my students with a center point before moving forward. The additional recordings and stated objectives provide my students two to three targeted improvements to digest and focus on for the next exercise.
Another exercise that I’m using to slow down my practicum course is a repeat simulation structure. In prior semesters, students were asked to verbally or in writing to reflect on, “if they were to do the simulation again, what would they do the same and what would they do differently?” Instead of packing in seven simulations this semester, I’ve downsized to four simulations with intermittent opportunities to repeat the simulations. This slowed process pushes students to identify and actively practice implementing the adjustment.
Today’s post is a light one… there is too much heavy plaguing our society. So, slow it down, have your students try one exercise again, again (and maybe again). You will be happy that you did.
(Amy Vaughan-Thomas)
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