The Center
for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction
CALI Lessons Subject List - Legal Concepts & Skills
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Douglas McFarland Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Teaching & Scholarship Hamline University School of Law Approximate completion time 14:56 minutes.
| Advice to a 1L From a Law Professor Podcast A Question and Answer session with Prof. McFarland, author of several of CALI's lessons in Tort Law and Civil Procedure. Prof. McFarland has been teaching for over 30 years. His comments in this podcast about the first semester of law school focus on the Socratic method, preparing for class, note-taking during class, class participation, "riding out" that "lost at sea" feel common during the first few weeks of law school, the appropriate use of study aids, advice about law school exams, and general advice on doing well in law school. lcs05p |
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CALI Staff CALI Approximate completion time 5 minutes.
| The Appeal Game This is a game to test your memory of where decisions from district courts in each state would be appealed. game01 |
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Nicholas Georgakopoulos Harold R. Woodard Professor of Law Indiana University - Indianapolis School of Law Approximate completion time 45 minutes to 3 hours.
| Coase's Irrelevance 'Theorem' This lesson tries to explain Coasean irrelevance (which is often known as the "Coase Theorem"). lcs02 |
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Ronald Eades Professor of Law Louis D. Brandeis School of Law at the University of Louisville John Farago Professor of Law City University of New York Law School Patrick Wiseman Professor of Law Georgia State University College of Law Approximate completion time 21:38 minutes.
| Exam Taking Skills, Outlines, and Advice for Law Students: Panel 1 PodCast CALI's Director of Curriculum Development, Deb Quentel, spoke with six law professors about outlines, studying for class, preparing for exams, time management, and how professors grade exams. The conversations were recorded as podcasts. While these podcasts are not intended to take the place of a conversation with your professor, the professors hope that these podcasts give law students additional insight into the exam process. Panel 1: Professors Ron Eades, John Farago, Patrick Wiseman lcs03p1 |
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Ronald Brown Professor of Law Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad Law Center Joseph Grohman Professor of Law Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad Law Center Approximate completion time 12:19 minutes.
| Exam Taking Skills, Outlines, and Advice for Law Students: Panel 2 PodCast CALI's Director of Curriculum Development, Deb Quentel, spoke with six law professors about outlines, studying for class, preparing for exams, time management, and how professors grade exams. The conversations were recorded as podcasts. While these podcasts are not intended to take the place of a conversation with your professor, the professors hope that these podcasts give law students additional insight into the exam process. Panel 2: Professors Ron Brown and Joe Grohman lcs03p2 |
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Darryl Wilson Professor of Law Stetson University College of Law Approximate completion time 11:48 minutes.
| Exam Taking Skills, Outlines, and Advice for Law Students: Panel 3 PodCast CALI's Director of Curriculum Development, Deb Quentel, spoke with six law professors about outlines, studying for class, preparing for exams, time management, and how professors grade exams. The conversations were recorded as podcasts. While these podcasts are not intended to take the place of a conversation with your professor, the professors hope that these podcasts give law students additional insight into the exam process. Panel 3: Professor Darryl Wilson lcs03p3 |
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Edward Martin Professor of Law Samford University Cumberland School of Law Approximate completion time 2 hours.
| How to Brief a Case This is an exercise designed to introduce first-semester law students to the basic elements of a typical case "brief" and to teach them general methodology for writing their own briefs. The exercise consists of three parts: (1) an introduction to the purposes and uses of a case brief; (2) a detailed examination of each of the ten components of a typical case brief (with examples); and (3) two actual cases that students are asked to read and then to brief, using the methodology described in this exercise. A sample brief for each of the two cases is also provided, thereby allowing students to correct and modify their briefs by way of comparison. lwr09 |
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Ronald Brown Professor of Law Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad Law Center Joseph Grohman Professor of Law Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad Law Center Approximate completion time 24:33 minutes.
| Preparing for Your First Semester of Law School Professors Brown and Grohman, are the authors of many CALI lessons. Additionally, both teach 1L courses. In this podcast they share their experiences and insights on time mangement issues for law school students, preparing for class, how to brief a case, research tips applicable for 1L writing assignments (and the eventual practice of law), how to develop an understanding of the law, and techniques and tips for studying and preparing for the final exam. In this podcast Professors Grohman and Brown mention several additional resources students may want to review. They are:
lcs08p |
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Ronald Brown Professor of Law Nova Southeastern University Shepard Broad Law Center Approximate completion time 30 minutes.
| Statutory Interpretation This lesson introduces the student to the doctrine and processes involved in interpreting state and federal statutes. Statutes are a critical part of every substantive area of the law, so this is important background for every law student, lawyer and judge. lcs03 |
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Scott Burnham Professor of Law The University of Montana School of Law Approximate completion time 11:14 minutes.
| Tips for Multiple Choice Exams in Law School Podcast Prof. Burnham, author of a number of CALI lessons and podcasts provides students with advice on multiple choice exam questions. Prof. Burnham goes into the different aspects of a multiple choice question: the stimulus, options, key, and distracters. Additionally, Prof. Burnham discusses the different types of multiple choice questions such as questions that test a student’s ability to recall information, those that draw on materials discussed in class, and those that require analysis. Students are taught how to respond to the call of a question, apply IRAC to multiple choice questions, as well as different tactics for eliminating options in a question. At the end of this lesson students will know how to decipher what type of question is being asked, how to spot the specific issue in the question, and how to eliminate the other choices. lcs07p |
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Jennifer Martin Associate Professor of Law Western New England College School of Law Approximate completion time 11:20 minutes.
| Top 10 Tips for Successfully Writing a Law School Essay In this podcast, Prof. Jennifer Martin discusses the top ten mistakes law students make in law school examinations. These are poor issue spotting, poor issue spotting, poor knowledge and understanding of the law, poor application of the law to the facts, giving only conclusory answers, lack of organization, errors in the facts, failure to understand the role you are given in the examination, padding, fact inventing, and question begging. Included in this discussion is guidance on spotting the issues, avoiding being bottom line oriented, how to use the facts, how to approach a question, and using words efficiently. Prof. Martin also discusses the hallmarks of a good essay answer. These answers are lawyerlike, responsive to the question asked, logical, thought out, well organized, fact and issue centered, and use cogent reasoning and good rule application. lcs06p |
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Diane Murley Professor of Law Sandra Day O'Connor College of Law at Arizona State University Approximate completion time 30 minutes.
| Where Does Law Come From? This is an overview of the branches of the U.S. government and how they make law. lcs04 |
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William Andersen Judson Falknor Professor of Law University of Washington School of Law Approximate completion time 1.5 hours.
| Writing Better Law School Exams: The Importance of Structure This program is designed to be useful to students interested in improving their exam-writing techniques. In much of the written work done by lawyers (including writing exams as students), a special form of writing is used. The program begins with an explicit discussion of that form, and the structural implications it has. Within that specific context, the program goes on to discuss the tasks to be performed, the tools used in performing those tasks, and methods of sharpening those tools. The program concludes with some interactive opportunities to try the techniques described. exam01 |

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