黑料不打烊

‘There鈥檚 always more that you can learn’

What was one of Assistant Professor Amanda Elyse鈥檚 observations to aspiring attorneys who took part in the inaugural program of a new video series hosted by the American Bar Association鈥檚 Law Student Division? "Where we start in legal writing is not a fixed point."

黑料不打烊 Law Assistant Professor Amanda Elyse

One of 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 newest faculty members offered advice on legal writing to a national audience as the featured guest in a program launched this month by the American Bar Association.

Assistant Professor Amanda Elyse, who teaches in 黑料不打烊 Law鈥檚 Legal Method & Communication Program, addressed aspiring lawyers from across the United States in the first 鈥淰irtual Office Hours鈥 organized by the ABA鈥檚 Law Student Division.

鈥淚 enjoyed the chance to connect with law students from across the country and share tips about legal writing,鈥 Elyse said. 鈥淭he Virtual Office Hours are a great example of how we can use virtual spaces to connect across schools and learn from each other.鈥

Among Elyse’s suggestions to students:

  • Legal writing is a process that begins with brainstorming, which leads to outlining and diagraming – both important steps to effective written communication.
  • Don鈥檛 procrastinate. Even when your thoughts aren鈥檛 fully formed, put 鈥減en to paper鈥 to give you time to work with words and, later, to proofread and revise a draft.
  • Read your work out loud. 鈥淚t鈥檚 amazing the things that you can catch through reading a piece of writing out loud. … I push my students to do this and every year they tell me that it helps them a lot by catching things in their writing and improving their sentence structure.鈥
  • Print hard copies of your work when you begin revisions. 鈥淲hen we are looking at screens, our brains are trained to skim a lot, and we don鈥檛 read as closely,鈥 she said. 鈥淲hen you sit down with a hard copy and have a pen in your hand, you will catch things that you wouldn鈥檛 on the screen.鈥
  • Meet with your faculty members. 鈥淒on鈥檛 think that you鈥檙e bothering professors,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 part of our job to meet with you! And I find it to be one of the most rewarding parts of my job, to meet one-on-one student students and see how they鈥檙e writing is tangibly improving.鈥

In addition to her legal writing advice, Elyse offered broader recommendations for communicating about the legal profession to those unfamiliar with the profession.

鈥淪eek out pieces of writing that aren鈥檛 written by who you usually hear from in law school,鈥 she said. 鈥淎 lot of what we read is written by lawyers and judges, for lawyers and judges, but obviously the legal system impacts many more people than that. 鈥 I encourage you to seek out writing that’s maybe written by people from impacted communities or who, for some reason, are going to have a different perspective on the law. You can also work to develop how you talk about the law with more of a mixture of audiences.鈥

Elyse joined the 黑料不打烊 Law faculty in 2020 after spending two years teaching Legal Writing, Skills, and Values at Seattle University School of Law. While she was in practice, Elyse represented social justice activists in both civil and criminal cases, as well as provided legal support to prisoners, including people indicted under the Animal Enterprise Terrorism Act.

Prior to her teaching role, she practiced with the Justice Law Group, the Civil Liberties Defense Center, and her own solo firm in Oregon. Elyse received her Juris Doctor from Seattle University School of Law, her Master of Science in writing from Portland State University, and her Bachelor of Arts (with Honors) in English with a creative writing emphasis from the University of Washington.

The ABA program was moderated by Jireh Davis, a second-year student at Thurgood Marshall School of Law at Texas Southern University.