Learn about the various legal education applications at CALIcon16

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Welcome

The Conference for Law School Computing® – aka CALIcon – is the only conference that brings together law professors, IT professionals, law librarians and law school administrators to discuss technology and its impacts on legal education.

For more information about CALIcon, including registration, hotel and program news, please read on.

EDUCATION:  The conference will deliver dozens of sessions with real people sharing real experiences creating, using, designing and implementing technology in support and practice of legal education.  The latest topics and trends in legal education are grouped into 4 tracks:

Technology: Focus on industry innovations & future growth opportunities in the legal technology field.
Course Management: Focus on improving and building course strategies/tools needed by law faculty to manage and strengthen legal educational program(s) for maximum success.
Experiential Learning:  Focus on the convergence of online and face-to-face educational models to develop the right blended learning applications in a legal education setting.
Case Studies:  Focus on proven real-world legal education applications.​

CONFERENCE FEES:  We are please to announce that the 2016 conference fees has not increased.

  • $295 for attendees from CALI member law schools
  • $695 for attendees from non-CALI member institutions
  • $95 for member presenter registration
  • $195 for new voices presenter registration
  • $495 for non-member presenter registration

HOTEL INFORMATION:There is a block of hotel rooms reserved for attendees / exhibitors at the Ritz-Carlton Atlanta.  The hotel is a three-minute walk to the Georgia State University College of Law.  We strongly recommend booking your hotel as soon as possible because the room block will sell out.

The Ritz-Carlton Atlanta
181 Peachtree Street, NE
Atlanta, GA 30303
404-659-0400
www.ritzcarlton.com/atlanta
GROUP CODE:  CALCALA
GROUP RATE:  $149.00 p/n  (CUTOFF DATE:  Friday, May 20, 2016)

Group room rates are subject to applicable state and local taxes. (City: 4%, State: 4%, Occupancy: 8%) in effect at the time of check in.

              

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CALIcon16 Keynote Speakers are Announced!

CALIcon16 Website Banner (Hazard)FinalHires5Hugh McGuire, founder of Pressbooks, an online book publishing platform and Michael Feldstein, a Partner at MindWires Consulting, a consulting firm helping schools, educational companies, and policy-makers navigate the new world of digital education will be the keynote speakers at the 26th Annual CALIcon Conference. They will address this year’s theme “Year of Learning Dangerously” and share their experience and expertise on a range of topics facing the publication industry.

About Hugh McGuire

Hugh McGuire is the founder of PressBooks, an online book publishing platform built on WordPress, and of LibriVox.org, the largest library of free, public domain audiobooks in the world, all read by volunteers.

Mr. McGuire is also the founder of the small commercial audiobook company, Iambik Audiobooks, and the co-editor, with Brian O’Leary, of Book: A Futurist’s Manifesto — Essays from the bleeding edge of publishing (O’Reilly).

Mr. McGuire has talked about the future of publishing around the world, and his work has appeared in various places in print, bits and audio, including: the New York Times, Forbes, the LA Times, BBC Radio, the New Yorker, CBC Radio, NPR, TechCrunch and Pando Daily.

About Michael Feldstein

Michael is a Partner at MindWires Consulting, Co-Publisher of e-Literate, and Co-Producer of e-Literate TV. Previously, he has been the Senior Program Manager of MindTap at Cengage Learning and Principal Product Strategy Manager for Academic Enterprise Solutions (formerly Academic Enterprise Initiative, or AEI) at Oracle Corporation. Prior to to that, Michael was an Assistant Director at the SUNY Learning Network, where he oversaw blended learning faculty development and was part of the leadership team for the LMS platform migration efforts of this 40-campus program. Before SUNY, he was co-founder and CEO of a company that provided e-learning and knowledge management products and services to Fortune 500 corporations, with a special emphasis on software simulations. He has also been the interim CLO at The Otter Group, a Senior Partner at Christensen/Roberts Solutions, and a Senior Instructional Designer at Raymond Karsan Associates. In previous lives, Michael has been a freelance writer, an English PhD student, a middle school and high school teacher, a tire wrangler at a Yokohama Tire warehouse, and a professional loafer at Schooley’s Mountain County Park.

The 26th Annual CALI Conference for Law School Computing is June 16 – 18, 2016 at Georgia State University College of Law in Atlanta, GA. See http://2016.calicon.org/ for all the details.

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37 Free Ways to Use Tech in Your Law School Course

I often run across interesting ways that faculty can and do use technology in their courses – law faculty and others – and I decided to collect them all in one place for the benefit of law faculty seeking interesting ideas.  Some ideas are more substantive than others, and they all require some small effort to implement, but I hope you find something useful in the list.  

If you have ideas that should be added to this list, please email me at jmayer@cali.org and I will periodically update and republish this article from time to time.  

Of course, as Executive Director of CALI, some of the ideas listed use CALI created resources which are free to CALI member law schools.  If your law school is not a CALI member, I would be delighted to come to your school, at my expense, buy your faculty lunch and deliver a thought-provoking, fun, informative presentation on CALI and its benefits.

 1.  CALI Logo with tagline

Run a CALI lesson (www.cali.org/lessons) on the projector in the classroom and have the students vote on the answers before revealing the correct answer.   Even better, have the student pick their answers using Instapoll (www.cali.org/instapoll) so that you can see how many people got it right or wrong.

[CALI]


 2. Time Trial

Give the students a 5 minute challenge playing Time Trial (www.cali.org/timetrial) where they have to put dates of famous cases, Supreme Court Justices and Acts of Law into the correct chronological order.  The student with the highest score after 5 minutes wins a prize.

[CALI][GAME][LEGAL HISTORY]


 3. Wikipedia

Pick a case from this list (Supreme Court Cases that don’t have a Wikipedia article) on Wikipedia and have the students draft an article on it for Wikipedia.  

Here is the URL:

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_Supreme_Court_cases

Look for the RED links – these are the cases without an article.   Alternatively, have your students read and edit and improve an existing article about a Supreme Court case adding links to other Wikipedia articles or additional references.

[WIKIPEDIA][SUPREME COURT][WRITING]


 4.Oyez

After reading a recent Supreme Court Case, have the students listen to the oral arguments on Oyez (www.oyez.org) and discuss the merits of the speakers.

[OYEZ][SUPREME COURT][AUDIO]



 5. Court Listener

Go to Court Listener’s Mapper and have the student create a citation network that links two Supreme Court cases.“Over time, as the Court elaborates on legal doctrine, earlier cases become connected to later cases by chains of citation. Lawyers often refer to such chains of related cases as lines of cases. This tool allows users to analyze and study lines of cases by creating citation networks.”

Have them prepare to explain the linkage and significance of the precedence.

[SUPREME COURT]


 6. elangdell

Have the students compare the chapters or sections of their casebook with the same chapters or sections in the free ebook casebooks at elangdell.cali.org.  Which author explained the concept better?  What makes a good legal explanation?  CALI has free casebooks that are free under a Creative Commons license in …

Torts
First Amendment
Income Tax
Contracts
Evidence
Property
Land Use
Civil Procedure

[CALI][EBOOKS][CASEBOOKS]



 7.Classcaster

Create your own class blog at Classcaster (www.classcaster.net).  Post sample exam questions with model answers and have the students comment using the comment features of the blog system.  

[CALI] [WRITING][BLOGGING]


 8. CALI author

Download CALI Author from http://www.cali.org/content/cali-author and write your own short CALI lesson and use AutoPublish to post it for your students.

Learning CALI Author is more of a time investment than some of these other ideas.There are tutorials on YouTube here.

[CALI][TUTORIALS][QUIZZES]


 

 9. Social Media

Have your students watch the video on Social Media in Law Practice by Ernie the Attorney and discuss the different ways that lawyers can get into trouble using social media.

[SOCIAL MEDIA]



 10. Google Docs

At the beginning of the semester, designate 3 students to be the class note-takers using Google Docs.  Everyone else has to close their laptops.  At the end, have the students share their notes with everyone else in the course (you will need to have a list of emails for everyone in the class handy).  Do this every day with 3 different students.  Decide with the class if this system will work instead of everyone taking notes all the time.

[CLASS NOTES]


 11. Twitter

At the end of class, have everyone create 3 tweets on Twitter with a hashtag for the class (e,g, #MayerEvidenceYale) that describes what was essentially covered during the class.

Use Storify to create a permanent web page of all the tweets. 

Forcing your students to condense their thoughts into 140 characters is an interesting exercise in brevity and consolidation.  The results might give you insight into what the students are absorbing from your lectures.

[CLASS NOTES]


 

 12. Vine Video

Have students create a Vine (6 seconds of video) that summarizes a legal concept covered in your course.  Most points go for something that takes into account Vine’s continual looping.   Vine is like video-twitter for thought condensation.

[VIDEO]


 13. Anki flash cards spaced repitition

Have your students download Anki and create 10 flashcards each for the subject matter of your course.  Have them share the results with each other.  Anki is free and uses spaced repetition to efficiently learn and memorize facts. 

[FLASH CARDS][SPACED REPETITION]


 14. desktop video

Use Skype, GoToMeeting, Zoom, Periscope or any other desktop video conferencing software to invite outside experts to give short talks to your classes.  

[VIDEO][OUTSIDE EXPERTS][GUEST LECTURERS]


 15. lawdibles podcasts
Legal Talk Network

Pick a law-related podcast from Lawdibles  or the LegalTalkNetwork and play one in class for discussion.  The LegalTalkNetwork has podcasts in all kinds of categories like…

Best Legal Practices
Business Law
e-Discovery
General Counsel
In-House Counsel
Information Security
Intellectual Property
Law School
Legal Marketing
Legal News
Legal Support
Legal Technology
Medical Law
Practice Management
Workers Compensation

[PODCAST]


 16. Coggle mind maps

Give your students the assignment to use Coggle to create mind maps of a legal process or area of law.  

“Whether you’re note-taking, brainstorming, planning, or doing something awesomely creative, Coggle makes it super-simple for you to visualise your ideas.”

Have the students present the results in class and discuss/defend their creations.

[MIND MAPS]


 17. qnamarkup

Have your students create a question and answer interview for a client in a simple legal matter using QNAMarkup.  Require each student to write an interview and review another student’s interview.  This could be a simple exercise or something more complex where students have to research an area of law to understand what questions need to be asked and what the best order is to ask them.

[LEGAL PROCESS]



 18. calicon

Use a class session or have your students watch a conference presentation from hundreds of CALI Conference sessions on Youtube  There are dozens of sessions on law practice, technology in legal education, etc.

[VIDEO][CALI CONFERENCE][LEGAL TECH]


 19. Search all law school websites

Use the “Search All Law School Websites” service created by CALI to find out what other/all law schools have videos of guest lectures given at different law schools.  Type “guest lecture” into the search box for a good list.

[VIDEO][GUEST LECTURERS]


 20. NY COURTS

Have your student pretend they are getting a divorce, name change or other legal matter and use New York Courts DIY Forms to fill out the proper form.  Let them see how it looks from the viewpoint of a self represented litigant.  Get the final document and have the student critique the process and output and final result.

[LEGAL PROCESS][DOCUMENT AUTOMATION]


 21. instapoll

CALI’s Instapoll is like a clicker, but uses only software.  Students use their smartphones or laptops to respond to multiple choice questions you give them in class.

Using Instapoll at www.cali.org/instapoll, ask questions of the class where the students choose and answer 1 – 6  or A – F and project the results on the screen to test whether students are understanding the material being covered.  Elicit discussion from the students who got it wrong.

[QUIZZES][CLICKERS][FEEDBACK]



 22. CALI LESSONS

Rather than covering material in class, assign CALI lessons for students to take using LessonLink so that you can see the student scores.  Use class time to discuss the material rather than lecture on it.

[QUIZZES][TUTORIALS][FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT]


 23. WRITE CLEARLY

Have your students paste some of their recent writing into https://readability-score.com/ to see what grade level their writing is at.  Then have them visit WriteClearly.org, a website that helps lawyers reduce legalese in their writing.  Have them practice changing the language to get a lower score to make their writing more readable for non-lawyers.

[WRITING]


 24. ABA LTRC

Have your students view the Practice Management Comparison chart from the American Bar Association’s Legal Technology Resource Center and discuss the features needed for the area of practice they are interested in.

[PRACTICE MANAGEMENT]


 25. LAWYERIST.COM best law firm websites

Have your students look at what are considered some of the best law firm websites here and here.   Discuss what they would be looking for if they were hiring a lawyer.  What are they going to put on their law firm website. 

[PRACTICE MANAGEMENT]


 

 26. law genius

Have your students annotate your casebook (or any case or statute that you choose) at Law Genius – a free, open resource for lawyers and law students.
[CASE READING][CLASS NOTES]



 27. famous trials

Teach a recent case, like the Zimmerman Trial,  from Professor Doug Linder’s Famous Trials website.

[CASES]



 28. Pinterest

Pinterest is a social network that allows users to visually share, and discover new interests by posting (known as ‘pinning’ on Pinterest) images or videos to their own or others’ boards (i.e. a collection of ‘pins,’ usually with a common theme)”

Have each student pick a case that you are studying in the course and use Pinterest to find 10 images, articles or videos that relate to that case or the subject or issues in that case.  Have the students share these with the entire class.  The goal is to develop student’s visual communication skills.

[CASES]



 29. quizzlet

Create quizzes for your students at Quizlet.  Have students add their own questions to your course quiz. 

[QUIZZES][FORMATIVE ASSESSMENT] 



 30. frequently asked questions

FAQ stands for Frequently Asked Questions.  Have your students create their own FAQ for the course at the midpoint and before the final.   FAQs are used for areas that are most likely to cause confusion or the questions that come from people new to a subject area.

[CLASS NOTES] 



 31. pecha kucha

Pecha Kucha is a presentation style in which 20 slides are shown for 20 seconds each (6 minutes and 40 seconds in total).   It’s also sometimes called an Ignite Presentation.  Have your students create a Pecha Kucha for a single topic in the course and present to the class.

[PRESENTATION SKILLS]



 32. pecha flickr

PechaFlickr is a fun way to learn how to think on your feet.  Using PechaFlickr and a keyword from your course “LAW, TORTS, CRIME, CONSTITUTION, etc.) have your students practice presentation skills, quick thinking and having fun with random images taken from Flickr

[PRESENTATION SKILLS] 



 33. drone crashes

Search for “Drone Fails” on Youtube and have your students list all the laws that are likely broken in each video.

[VIDEO][CUTTING EDGE LAW] 



 34. constitute.org

Check out the Constitute.org website where constitutions from around the world are compared.  Give each student a different country to compare with the US Constitution.

[CON LAW][COMPARATIVE LAW] 


 35. terms of service

Have your students find and read all the Terms of Service for all of the software on their own laptops including iTunes, MacOS, Windows, Adobe Acrobat (PDF viewer), etc.  Discuss the implications of entering into contracts without reading the terms. Copy and paste the terms into a readability website (mentioned above).

[CONTRACTS] 



 36. eff.org

Assign a White Paper from the eff.org to two different students.  Have one argue for and the other argue against the premise of the paper.

[CUTTING EDGE LAW] 



 37. powtoons

Assign to teams of 2-3 students to make animations using PowToons that explain an area of law to other students or to potential clients. 

[GRAPHICS]

 

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CALI Announces its new A2J Project Matching Portal!

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CALI is pleased to announce its new A2J Project Matching Portal, a new easy-to-use feature on a2jauthor.org that facilitates partnerships between legal aid organizations, courts, and law schools to create A2J Guided Interviews. This portal centralizes A2J form automation projects across the country to scale the number of A2J Guided Interviews that are available for use by self-represented litigants. Legal aid organizations and courts seeking help with automating legal forms using A2J Author can post those projects to the portal. Law school faculty members can then find available projects for their students in courses like those in the A2J Author Course Project.

The A2J Project Matching Portal will contribute to lowering barriers to justice by making it easy to post and find available A2J projects. Legal aid organizations and courts can save time looking for help to automate forms. In turn, law students will have an opportunity to do important public interest work while gaining technical competencies that are crucial for professional development. Through those collaborative efforts, self-represented litigants will have access to more self-help tools covering a wide array of legal issues.

For questions about the matching portal, please contact Alexander Rabanal or John Mayer.

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CALIcon16 Conference Registration is NOW OPEN!

CALIcon16 Website Banner (Hazard)FinalHires5 REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN!

Join us at CALIcon16.  The conference will deliver dozens of sessions with real people sharing real experiences creating, using, designing and implementing technology in support and practice of legal education.  The latest topics and trends in legal education are grouped into 4 tracks:

  • Technology: Focus on industry innovations & future growth opportunities in the legal technology field.
  • Course Management: Focus on improving and building course strategies/tools needed by law faculty to manage and strengthen legal educational program(s) for maximum success.
  • Experiential Learning:  Focus on the convergence of online and face-to-face educational models to develop the right blended learning applications in a legal education setting.
  • Case Studies:  Focus on proven real-world legal education applications.​
        

Click button to register

About the Conference:

The 26th Annual CALI Conference for Law School Computing® is a three-day event that brings together leading academics, educators, institutional leaders, and technology professionals to discuss the transformation of legal education through technology and innovation. Our theme for 2016 is “The Year of Learning Dangerously”, echoing the tough balancing act to meet the growing demands within the legal education industry.

Who Attends CALIcon?

Our attendees are a mixture of law professors, law librarians and library directors, law school IT staff and law clinic faculty. We are also beginning to see attendees from the legal technology world. They are early-adopters, socially connected and highly influential in technology purchasing decisions. We expect 250 – 350 attendees this year.

To register, click here


OUR SPONSORS:

                                                                                     
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CALIcon16 Call for Presentations

CALIcon16 Website Banner (Hazard)FinalHires5CALIcon16 Website Banner (Hazard)FinalHires5

CALIcon16
June 16-18
Georgia State University College of Law
Atlanta, GA
http://2016.calicon.org

Call for Presentations (Deadline Friday, April 8, 2016):

Declining applications and the legal marketplace recession creates a more complex and competitive market for legal education and lawyers.  Many of the fixes have a technology component like distance learning, formative assessment, virtual law practice, law practice tech, document and process automation to name a few.  Many technologies that have proven themselves in other places are finally being looked at for legal education and law practice – they are no longer dangerous.

CALIcon16 will deliver dozens of sessions with real people sharing real experiences creating, using, designing and implementing technology in support and practice of legal education.  The latest topics and trends in legal education are grouped into 4 tracks:

  • Technology: Focus on industry innovations & future growth opportunities in the legal technology field.
  • Course Management: Focus on improving and building course strategies/tools needed by law faculty to manage and strengthen legal educational program(s) for maximum success.
  • Experiential Learning:  Focus on the convergence of online and face-to-face educational models to develop the right blended learning applications in a legal education setting.
  • Case Studies:  Focus on proven real-world legal education applications.

For 26 years, the CALI Conference has organized its schedule at nearly the last minute in order to bring the most relevant and up-to-date presentations to attendees. This year is no different and we are looking for law school faculty, librarians, and technologists with strong opinions, great ideas, interesting projects and useful advice.   Come and share and be challenged. If you are willing and able to speak, your conference registration fee is just $95!

Submission Process:

To propose a session, visit our website http://2016.calicon.org/proposal, create an account on the site, validate your account, and click on the “Propose a session” link. Sessions need to be submitted by Friday, April 8, 2016. All sessions need to be submitted through the CALI conference website.

  • All sessions are 1 hour long. Everything will be recorded and posted online.

If you have any questions about the Call for Presentations or speaking at CALIcon16 in general please contact:

Elmer Masters
Director of Technology, CALI
emasters@cali.org or 773-332-7508

Selection Process:

  • Sessions need to be submitted by Friday April 8, 2016. All sessions need to be submitted through the CALI conference website.
  • We are going to use community voting to help with selecting sessions again this year. Your votes let us know which sessions you would like to see on the conference agenda. Starting on Friday April 8, 2016, voting will be opened and will remain open through Friday April 22, 2016. The number of votes for a session will be taken into consideration as part of the session acceptance process and to help with scheduling. To vote you will just need to login to the conference website and vote for the sessions you would like to see on the agenda. You do not need to be registered for the conference to vote.
  • We will notify speakers via email by May 6, 2016 if their session is approved. The listing of approved sessions will be posted on the conference website on May 6, 2016.

About the Conference:

The 26th Annual CALI Conference for Law School Computing® brings together leading academics, educators, institutional leaders, and technology professionals to discuss the transformation of legal education through technology and innovation. Our theme for 2016 is “The Year of Learning Dangerously”, echoing the tough balancing act to meet the growing demands within the legal education industry.

Who Attends CALIcon?

Our attendees are a mixture of law professors, law librarians and library directors, law school IT staff and law clinic faculty. We are also beginning to see attendees from the legal technology world. They are early-adopters, socially connected and highly influential in technology purchasing decisions. We expect 250- 350 attendees this year.

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CALI® Elects Board of Directors

During the CALI Annual Member Meeting, held June 9, in New York City, attendees unanimously elected one new member and re-elected four others to its Board of Directors. “We are very fortunate to have these outstanding individuals on our Board to contribute valuable insight to the research and development, strategic planning and governance of CALI”, John Mayer, Executive Director.

The new CALI’s board member:

Professor Debra R. Cohen

University of the District of Columbia School of Law

Current term: 2016-2019

Bio

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Re-Elected to 3-year term:

Professor Jennifer S. Martin,

Saint Thomas University School of Law, Miami

Current term: 2016-2019

PRESIDENT (until 2018)

Bio

 

Professor Sally H. Wise

University of Miami School of Law

Current term: 2016-2019

TREASURER (until 2017)

Bio

 

Professor Stephen M. Johnson

Mercer University Law School

Current term: 2016-2019

Bio

 

Professor Patrick Wiseman

Georgia State University College of Law

Current term: 2016-2019

Bio

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Make CALI’s exhibit booth one of your must-see sites to visit at the 2016 AALS Annual Meeting

In New York City there are several must-see sites to visit. One of them is the CALI exhibit booth during the 2016 AALS Annual Meeting, scheduled from January 6th -10th, at the Hilton New York Midtown. Stop by to say “hi” to the staff and ask us “what’s new!” We will be happy to speak with you about how since Thanksgiving over 17,000 law students ran over 135,000 CALI Lessons™, our electronic casebook initiative, eLangdell®, if you’re interested in adopting open casebooks that are freely available to your students, and introducing our own document assembly tool which will make A2J Author® a complete “end-to-end” product for online forms projects.

Please contact Scott Lee at scott@cali.org to schedule a private demonstration time with our staff.

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Join us at the CALI® Annual Breakfast and Membership Meeting

Join us at the CALI® Annual Breakfast and Membership Meeting. This is an invite-only membership meeting where John Mayer (Executive Director – CALI) will give a brief overview of the trends in legal education technology and CALI’s initiatives for 2016. You’ll also have a great networking opportunity with fellow members.

Space is limited! Send your RSVP to LaVonne Molde (Membership Services Director – CALI) at lvmolde@cali.org. by Sunday, December 27, 2015.

 

CALI Breakfast and Annual Members Meeting

Saturday, January 9, 2016

7:15 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. EST

Sheraton New York Times Square Hotel

Bowery Room, Lower Level

811 7th Avenue, W 53rd St.

New York, NY 10019

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CALI HAS A NEW MARKETING DUDE

CALI Staff cartoon

CALI Staff cartoon

I want to welcome Scott Lee to the CALI Staff.  Scott started last week as our Community Marketing Specialist.  Scott has a ton of experience with various tech companies but is new to the legal education/legal tech space.  He will be CALI’s main contact to the CALI Representatives at each law school and will coordinate our activities at AALS, AALL and CALICon.   

Marketing for CALI an unusual challenge.  Almost all law schools are already CALI members, so we are not selling a product so much as encouraging law students to use our resources and law faculty to adopt or recommend us to their students.   We don’t measure success by income, but by our member’s success in providing legal education via computer-mediated means – CALI lessons, ebooks, legal process automation, instapoll, formative assessment and many other projects.  

You will be hearing much more about these initiatives in the coming months.

Scott’s contact info…

Scott Lee
Community Marketing Specialist/CALI
scott@cali.org
312-906-5316
@slee_CTSMCMECMP – twitter

 

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