Editing & Writing
Syllabus
Tom Field --- Summer 1998
No prerequisites. I hope for diversity; one must often write for people with very different backgrounds and interests.
If you plan to drop, you must do it by the end of the first day.
I. Materials
- Plain English for Lawyers
Source of exercises for most classes
- Scholarly Writing for Law Students
To be discussed in one class, an excellent reference
- Blue Book (16th Ed.)
I assume that people already have it.
- Handouts
- Also useful
- Winning on Appeal
I assume that people also have this. If not, don't worry about it.
- The Legal Writing Nutshell is also useful for reference.
- Day-to-Day Notepad
I will demonstrate the use of Acta, an ancestor. Such outlining software goes beyond the realm of "easy typewriters" -- even with grammar and spell checking. The Notepad is inexpensive and available for both Macs and Windows.
II. Methodology
This course has not been offered before. I encourage student suggestions and
will try to implement them as we go along.
- I plan to focus on editing.
Problems in
course books will be supplemented with articles from Risk, possibly
Idea, depending on what's available.
- We will give attention to citation form, especially for federal administrative and legislative materials. This will call for brief attention to a few advanced research topics no longer covered in basic legal research.
- Students, on the first pass, will help edit each other's short written assignments -- in pairs or triads. Group membership will rotate so that everyone can work with everyone else at
least once.
- We may also be able to help those interested get a running start on, e.g., a case comment.
III. Evaluation
The course will be graded O/S/U, reflecting attendance, participation and prompt completion of modest writing and editing assignments (below). All work must be typed except for edits of classmates' work.
IV. Assignments by class
Class --- Date --- Assignment
- 1* --- 6/5
--- Introductions -- what you expect to take from the class
--- Discuss Syllabus, handouts, grammar checkers -- what people regard as their
own biggest weakness, as the biggest sins committed by others.
--- Demonstrate software.
- 2 --- 6/8
--- Scholarly Writing, pp. 1-63.
We may also discuss later if interest warrants.
--- Bring -- Case Note 1
A 2-3 pp. (about 500 words) description of Case X (each student chooses one) written for people in this class (will be edited in class).
- 3 --- 6/12
--- Hand in:
* Exercises 1A & 2A (Plain English) -- depending on how these go,
we may cover more exercises per class.
* the original and edited versions of Case Note 1.
--- Bring:
* a second copy of the exercises 1A & 2A for discussion
* Case Note 2: 2-3 pp. about Case X for a lawyer that you want to
work for.
- 4 --- 6/15
--- Hand in:
* Exercises 3A & 4A
* the original and edited versions of Case Note 2.
--- Bring:
* a second copy of the exercises for discussion
* Case Note 3: 2-3 pp. about Case X for a client who needs the
information.
- 5 --- 6/19
--- Hand in:
* Exercises 5A & 6A
* the original and edited versions of Case Note 3.
--- Bring:
* a second copy of the exercises for discussion
* Case Note 4: 2-3 pp. about Case X for a beginning 1-L.
- 6--- 6/22
--- Hand in:
* Exercises 7A & 8A
* the original and edited versions of Case Note 4.
--- Bring a second copy of the exercises for discussion
--- Begin work on Risk articles (chosen previously).
- 7 --- 6/26 --- As above: Exercises 9A & 10A
- 8 --- 6/29 --- As above: Exercises 11A & 12A
- 9 --- 7/3 --- As above: Exercises 13A & 14A
- 10 --- 7/6 --- As above: Exercises 15A & 16A
- 11 --- 7/10 --- As above: Exercises 17A & 18A
* Cindy Landau has kindly agreed to generate a few Blue Book exercises and lead discussion about citation form (and related research problems) in parts of two classes TBA.

Field's Exams
Field's course page


6/14/98 tgf
URL: http://www.piercelaw.edu/tfield/e&wsyl.htm
© 1998 Franklin Pierce Law Center