Improve your practice by sharpening your legal writing skills with Justia Webinars! Write Like the Best Legal Writers discusses the craft of legal writing, how lawyers can improve their legal writing skills, and why writing matters. Attendees will examine various examples that illustrate the five main strategies for improved legal writing: writing for non-lawyers, building a story arc, using shorter sentences, words, and smaller ideas, eliminating passive voice, and reading the final draft out loud.
- Introduction to Improving Your Legal Writing
- What are the common issues in poor or passable legal writing?
- What are the characteristics of strong legal writing?
- How to Write Like the Best Legal Writers
- Write for a non-lawyer audience
- Build a story arc
- Use shorter sentences and smaller ideas
- Eliminate passive voice and wordiness
- Finalize by reading aloud
- A study of three passages by three renowned legal writers
- Legal Writing Resources
- Ross Guberman, Point Made: How to Write Like the Nation's Best Advocates
- Bryan A. Garner, The Winning Brief
- Stephen V. Armstrong, Timothy Terrell, et al., Thinking Like a Writer: A Lawyer's Guide to Effective Writing and Editing
- Using spell check, grammar check, Grammarly, and ChatGPT
- ChatGPT and Legal Writing: Round Table Discussion
- Can ChatGPT and AI make writing more efficient?
- Are there ethical issues in using AI for legal writing?
- What are some other AI tools for legal writing beyond ChatGPT?
- Identifying sentences written by ChatGPT
- How will AI affect law practice?
- Questions & Answers
*CLE credit is only available to Justia Connect Pros. Not a Pro? Upgrade today>>
Status: Approved
Credits: 1.0 Prevention and Detection Competence
Earn Credit: January 19, 2025 – October 23, 2026
Status: Approved
Credits: 1.0 General
Earn Credit Until: March 09, 2025
Status: Pending
Credits: TBD
Earn Credit Until: TBD
This presentation is approved for one hour of Prevention and Detection Competence CLE credit in California, and one hour of General CLE credit in North Carolina. An application for accreditation of this activity has been submitted to the MCLE Committee of the State Bar of Texas and is pending.
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At this time, Justia only offers CLE courses officially accredited in certain states. Lawyers may generate a generic attendance certificate to self-submit credit in their own jurisdiction, but Justia does not guarantee that lawyers will receive their desired CLE credit through the self-submission or reciprocity process.