In an adversarial legal system the quality of advocacy directly affects the outcome, and hence justice. This blog is for everyone -however they serve our legal system - who is committed to improving the teaching of advocacy skills and ethics so that parties and the community are well served by persuasive and ethical advocates.
OUR FOCUS TOPIC-
Monday, May 25, 2015
MORE THOUGHTS ON EATS 2015 FROM AJ BELLIDO DE LUNA
Thursday, May 21, 2015
2015 EATS Retrospective
Monday, June 2, 2014
Suparna Malempati on The EATS Experience
In May, St. Petersburg, Florida, is gorgeous – sunny but not too hot, a slight breeze blowing occasionally, the air becoming cooler in the evenings – perfect weather. And Stetson University College of Law is a lovely school with absolutely beautiful courtrooms. Add to the mix, Charlie Rose, a self-described “bear of a man” (actually, I would say more of a charming teddy bear, although I have never been in his classroom). Charlie is a tried and true advocate. He also has an uncanny ability to bring people together and create an atmosphere of collegiality, cooperation, and inspiration.
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
“I got to get on the good foot…..” or Suggestions for Your Initial Class Session
Monday, May 27, 2013
A Retrospective Look at EATS 2013
Having just returned from the 2013 Educating Advocates/Teaching Skills Conference at Stetson University College of Law, I can once again report that EATS was an excellent experience. I was able to rekindle friendships with some of my favorite people and make friendships with people I'd never met before. The content was phenomenal. As always, I left invigorated and full of new ideas and plans for the future.
I knew the week would be good when I walked down to the lobby of the Loews Don Cesar Hotel, a glorious pink stucco palace and the most picturesque hotel in which I've ever stayed, the first morning of the conference. If you've never seen the Don Cesar, here's a beach-view photograph from a beach on the Gulf of Mexico (I didn't take the picture, but I like it). I think it's very difficult to feel unhappy at the Don Cesar.
Thursday, February 21, 2013
Schedule and Registration Link for Educating Advocates:Teaching Advocacy Skills 2013
I wanted to share the list of presentation topics & presenters for EATS this year. We have a great deal to talk about, and many folks are coming to share. As always, it will be a collaborative sharing environment where the attendees talk as much, if not more, than the presenters. Here is the list:
Saturday, June 9, 2012
The Exhibit View Take on EATS 2012: A Guest Piece by Bill Roach
My name is Bill Roach, Partner with ExhibitView Solutions, LLC and I was invited to take part in this year's "Educating Advocates" event. My presentation was late in the week and I was getting quite nervous. I mean, when people come up to you and say, "Are you ready for your show?", I thought, OMG, I had no idea what I was in for. However, being a musician with years of on- stage experience and a new "good listener", I was able to really take in much of the information I heard and cultivate a reasonably good presentation with several eruptions of laughter, but more on that later...
This year's focus was on implementing technology in Trial Advocacy classes. I listened intently as many in this group of about 60 attendees were "very excited about technology as a whole and some were a bit frightened by it" The speakers all had experience with courtroom technology. Some are simply experts on most everything you can use in a courtroom. Everyone in the room agreed that the younger generation simply gets it much quicker. Certainly the younger set are less intimidated by projectors, cables, and laptops and they probably LOVE figuring out remote controls ( I have to hold them too far away to read the small print)!
One recurring debate was "how much" technology should the students use in class? The best answer on that question for me, as an experienced trial technician was "as much as the students are comfortable with". I recommend (after years of courtroom experience operating a laptop and trial software on behalf of attorneys), thatteachers should advise students that it will crash and burn. It's natural, normal and we live in an imperfect world. It has happened to me and we just keep moving forward, get it fixed and continue after a break. Everyone agreed this should be a part of the learning adventure. Some of the teachers also suggested they simply tell students they must use technology and give no parameters. Leave it up to them. I really like this approach because it's what they will do in practice. I see it all the time. A lawyer calls me to ask about our product and says they need to get in the groove and improve their presentations with technology. Everyone also agrees it is becoming expected by juries. I tell my clients and prospective attorney clients to start slow. You don't have to load everything into your laptop or iPad to get started. If you have trepidations about technology, just give it a go with some basic exhibits, ones you can have readily available in hard copy to just move on.
You can use a laptop and projector, an iPad and a TV, vice versa, speakers, cables, wires, etc. Some courtrooms are wired, some are not. Some litigators have been at fancy courthouses with all kinds of technology around them, the hardware kind, and choose to set up their own simple projector and screen. Doing it this way keeps the user comfortable.
My finest moment during my presentation came as follows. During the first day Professor Rafe Foreman of UMKC School of Law gave a demonstration about a donkey kicking a client. He set the stage perfectly on the floor showing the distance the donkey had to reach to kick his client. He picked a member of the audience who acted as a defense expert. Rafe put him on one end of the room and about 15 feet away a white board. Rafe asked, "Do you think the donkey could reach my client and kick him?". The expert said, "No, it's too far". Rafe then grabbed his hand and spun around and kicked the board. Even I was amazed and thought WOW, what a great way to visualize a scene to a jury because even I thought the board was too far away. Rafe then asked the expert, "Now do you think the donkey could have kicked my client?" and in a soft, under his breath, quintessential defense expert reply he said, "maybe an acrobatic donkey". So, I went back to my hotel room later that night thinking about this experience and what I had heard. I searched on YouTube and found a video clip I was happy with.
During my presentation the following day, I asked everyone if they remembered the demonstration with the donkey. They said they did. I then asked if anyone actually heard the defense expert say those last words and someone in the second row exclaimed, "Yeah, he said it". Playing the actor I said, "I submit to you ladies and gentlemen of the jury there is such a thing as an acrobatic donkey and I have proof!" I tapped my ExhibitView iPad and played a clip of a donkey flying through the air being pulled up by a parasail boat. The room went crazy, the jury was mine.
Our company ExhibitView offers its desktop products at no cost to faculty and students. If you would like more information on our Law School Program or if you would to speak with me, Bill Roach, please don't hesitate contacting me at ExhibitView. mailto:wroach@exhibitview.net and our phone number is 706-622-3305.
Thursday, May 24, 2012
Day 2: EATS 2012
As I write this, Joshua Karton, the high priest/shaman of teaching advocates to become human beings, is working his magic with this year's group of new attendees. In another room, a group of conference veterans has just finished identifying a number of common advocacy teaching problems (and suggested solutions) that will become problem-solving vignettes for the entire conference tomorrow.
A few highlights from today's presentations.
1. Trial Competitions. The morning began with an all-star panel on the topic of Eddie Ohlbaum's Model Rules of Conduct for Mock Trial Competitions (MRMT). The panel consisted of Bobbi Flowers (Stetson), Eddie Ohlbaum (Temple), Jay Leach (McGeorge), Lee Coppock (Stetson) and Dave Erickson (Chicago-Kent). All of the panelists have coached championship teams and thus brought a tremendous amount of credibility to the discussion. This was not, in other words, a collection of perennial losers grousing about the general unfairness of life (I offered to moderate such a panel, but Charlie felt the credibility of his conference, and perhaps his law school, would suffer if I did so, and so he rather sensibly declined; also, Hugh and I had already participated in panels, and the other person we would have brought on the panel could not get funding to attend the conference). All of the panelists coach teams to win ethically and have experienced considerable success doing so. And all of them have seen the good, the bad, and the ugly in trial competitions.
The MRMT, which have been the subject of several blog entries and comments in the past (available here and here), were used in a number of competitions this past year (I am going to ask Eddie's permission to post these rules in the Documentary Resources page on this blog). The panel reported on the rules and led a lively discussion of cheating, whether the rules are necessary, what other types of rules might work, the role of competition committees and protests, and other similar topics.
Eddie memorably summed up the need for a 30-page code: "We have 30 pages of rules because there are at least 60 pages of ways to cheat at a trial competition." Eddie identified a laundry list of ways to cheat in a Powerpoint presentation. I will not post it here because of the possibility that it contains methods that some villainous coaches or nefarious students may not have thought of; there is no sense handing ammunition to an enemy.
To say that this was a lively discussion would be to mingle cliche with understatement. The panel and the audience were fully engaged, with all sides of the issues (other than the pro-cheating crowd; no one ever defended that position) zealously advocated and debated. I think it is fair to sum up the session as follows: (1) we all agree there is a problem with cheating and unethical behavior going unpunished or even rewarded at trial competitions; (2) there are a variety of approaches to solving the problem, including better competition files, the MRMT, positive incentives, negative incentives, naming and shaming cheaters, competition bans for cheaters, stronger competition protest committees and effective protest procedures, and the like; (3) in practice, the MRMT have worked remarkably well and have been fine-tuned to reflect the experiences and feedback from the competitions; (4) other approaches, especially better case files such as the one used in South Texas's competition this year, have also worked; and (5) the increased attention to this issue is making a difference.
2. Technology in Advocacy Teaching. The second panel of the conference devoted to this topic, this one was moderated by Hugh Selby (Australian National University) and included Tom Stewart (St. Louis University), Lou Fasulo (Pace) and the Honorable Robert McGahey (Denver judiciary, University of Denver Sturm College of Law). Tom Stewart began with a presentation about teaching evidence using a law firm model and treating the students as associates in his firm (with Tom as senior partner, of course) rather than the traditional student-professor relationship. Tom has obtained a fellowship to design and teach this course using an experimental classroom at St. Louis University. The classroom is designed to facilitate a different model of teaching and includes some absolutely amazing technology and equipment. The heart of the course, though, is Tom's course design, which is truly innovative and about which I am sure we will hear more in future blog posts from Tom.
Lou discussed innovative uses of technology at Pace. The first was permitting students to record their best performances on SD cards, with those performances graded. In other words, the student could refine, retape, record and redo the assignment until satisfied with their performance, in much the same way students are permitted (and encouraged) to rewrite papers. This best performance would then be graded. This is a different model than the typical advocacy model, which grades a particular performance at a set time, regardless of whether that is the student's best work. Taking advantage of some new video equipment at the school, Lou now gives his students the opportunity to conduct live, real-time critiques of their peers in the courtroom. The courtroom performance is fed to a monitor in the jury room. As the advocate in the courtroom is performing, Lou leads his students in a critique of the performance. They cannot be seen or heard by the advocate in the courtroom. Lou also has begun encouraging his far-flung student body to practice their advocacy performances with each other outside the courtroom through the use of Skype, Google Plus, and other technologies.
Bob McGahey gave a judicial perspective on technology and exhibits in the courtroom. Like Michelle Joiner in yesterday's panel, he emphasized the importance of the fundamentals, not only to cover for technology failures, but also to ensure the best and most effective use of technology.
3. Exhibit View. There's a new trial software suite, Exhibit View, that includes a traditional PC software suite as well as an IPad app. Bill Roach of exhibit view gave a presentation on the software. Bill is going to write a blog post on the software (and his views of the conference) in the next few days, so I will say only that this looks like a great piece of software. I'm going to obtain it, use it and teach it to my students. It's intuitive, easy and affordable. The company's website is www.exhibitview.net. Visit the site; I'm confident you'll be impressed with the software. I'm particularly excited about the IPad app.
Until tomorrow, all the best from Florida!
Wednesday, May 23, 2012
Day One: EATS 2012
1. Total attendees: over 60.
2. Sponsor of the day: West Publishing.
3. Lifetime Achievement Award: Jim Seckinger, University of Notre Dame School of Law. For those of us who have worked with and been mentored by Jim, this award is a long-overdue recognition of Jim's foundation-building work in advocacy teaching. In addition to teaching at Notre Dame for many years, Jim was involved in NITA almost from the beginning and was instrumental in developing the NITA method of teaching advocacy: learning by doing with controlled case files, a rigorous and disciplined critiquing methodology, and sharing of teaching materials and opportunities throughout the United States and the world. Jim gave a great speech (complete with the Jim-style handout that those of us who have worked with him in the past know, love and remember) on how he's the luckiest guy in the world to be have been able to: (1) marry Sheila Block; and (2) be able to spend his professional life doing something he loves with people he enjoys.
4. Noteworthy Presentations and Events.
- Nick Caputo of Chicago-Kent and the Caputo Law Firm gave a fantastic presentation on how to design a courtroom technology class.
- Nancy Schultz (Chapman) moderated a panel consisting of Michelle Joiner (Duquesne), Peter Hoffman (Elon), Mark Caldwell (NITA) and Chris Behan (SIU) on using technology to teach. The panelists presented and discussed ideas for video review (both instructor-guided and self-evaluation), use of on-line lectures and demonstrations to free up classroom time, and the importance of fundamental advocacy skills for those inevitable times when technology is unavailable because of judicial rulings, equipment failure and operator error.
- Charlie Rose (Stetson) and The Honorable Robert McGahey (Denver, CO judiciary) conducted a joint discussion on effective critiquing methods. This was followed, after lunch, by participants breaking up into small groups to practice and discuss critiquing. Stetson students graciously volunteered to play the advocate roles for this exercise.
- Barbara Ashcroft (Temple) gave a presentation on teaching advocates to use silence as a tool of persuasion at trial.
- Rafe Foreman (UMKC) presented on the use of psychodrama at trial.
Luckily for the advocacy teaching world (and the world at large, for that matter), the proceedings of this conference were recorded and will be posted to the Stetson on-line Advocacy Resource Center in the near future.
Regular readers of this blog will note that many of today's presenters are present and past contributors to the blog. In fact, some of the conference presentations and panels are a direct result of articles and debates that have been hosted on this blog in the last couple of years. Please contribute to the ongoing discussion about how best to teach advocacy by writing for us or commenting on blog posts.
For those of you who receive blog messages via email, you can visit the blog website itself and make comments by clicking on one of the links at the bottom of your email.