This week, we talk about the experiences that law students and recent law grads have during their internships, summer associate positions, and their judicial clerkships. While most of us work very hard to make sure that these (traditionally young) associates and clerks enjoy and learn from their experiences, today's guests understands firsthand that not all of these experiences are positive. Aliza Shatzman, the co-founder of the Legal Accountability Project, talks with us about her judicial clerkship, which essentially derailed her legal career before it even gets started.
While Shatzman’s dream of becoming a Homicide Prosecutor was taken from her, she took this negative experience and used it as motivation to start the Legal Accountability Project with her WashU classmate, Matt Goodman. The Project’s purpose is to “ensure that as many law clerks as possible have positive clerkship experiences, while extending support and resources to those who do not.”
The Legal Accountability Project is partnering with multiple law schools to create a post-clerkship survey that allows them to share their experiences (both positive and negative) through a database which will be shared with future clerks so they are better informed on what to expect from the clerkships. The idea is to use the data collected to quantify any issues and to craft effective solutions.
AALL Crystal Ball Question: Emily Janoski-Haehlen
Our Crystal Ball answer this week comes from the Dean of Akron Law School, Emily Janoski-Haehlen. Dean Janoski-Haehlen stresses the need for more legal skills training to better prepare students for legal practice. As a tie-in for the main interview, she also covers what questions her school asks returning summer associates and clerks and how they use those to help identify what is working and what needs improving.
Links Mentioned in this Episode:
Contact Us:
Twitter: @gebauerm or @glambert
Voicemail: 713-487-7270
Email: geekinreviewpodcast@gmail.com
Music: Jerry David DeCicca
Transcript available on 3 Geeks and a Law Blog
Unicourt's Josh Blandi on Improving Access to Federal, State, and Local Court Data
Molly Huie on Bloomberg Law's New DEI Framework
Jennifer Leonard of Penn Law's Future of the Profession Initiative
Nicole Bradick and Ryan McClead on the Launch of Map Engine and Life as a Startup Founder
Pablo Arredondo on CaseText's New WeSearch Tool and How the Neural Net Is Making Its Way Into Legal Information
Bob Taylor, Valerie Dickerson, and Mark Ross on Deloitte Legal Business Services
Dan Packel on the Rise of Distributed Law Firms
Adam Tsao and The Creativity Playbook for Lawyers
Kate Tompkins on Being a Practice Group Leader But Not a Lawyer
What's Next for Jeroen Plink?
Lex Machina's Karl Harris on the Past, Present, and Future of Legal Analytics
Sophia George and Chevazz Brown: Finding Diverse Lawyers via DiversePro
Geoff Zodda on Legal Industry Employment Trends in a Post-COVID World
Rachel Travers on the New Law360 Pulse
Brightflag's Alex Kelly on Using Data and Analytics to Make Better Legal Spend Decisions
AI for Lawyers with Noah Waisberg and Dr. Alexander Hudek
Nicole Morris on Emory Law Schools TI:GER Innovation Conference
How Mid-Level Associates Can Thrive at Law Firms - with Jennifer Bluestein
Jennifer Bluestein on Stepping It Up: A Guide for Mid-Level Law Firm Associates
The Who, What, and Why of #LegalTech with Kristin Hodgins and Jason Wilson
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
The emPOWERed Half Hour
NABOR® TALKS
U.S Property Podcast
Aligned Money Show
The Ramsey Show
Planet Money