How would I go about doing this?G. T. L. Rev. wrote:Well said--particularly the part about leaving positive feedback for the prof's tenure file. As students and clerkship applicants, we tend to ask, ask, ask, so it is nice to be able to give a little now and then when the opportunity arises.Danteshek wrote: Honesty is the best policy. If you are getting the professor's help in the context of writing a Note for your journal, it is understood that the professor is working in an advisory capacity only. If the professor does a very good job advising you, and that professor does not have tenure, I would suggest sending an email to the appropriate faculty member so that your thoughts can be included in that professors tenure review file.
publishing as a law student Forum
- A'nold
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Re: publishing as a law student
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Re: publishing as a law student
Think about what makes you tick, and write about that. I'm already planning my next article. And I'm also doing a Daily Journal piece on the article I just completed.A'nold wrote:How would I go about doing this?G. T. L. Rev. wrote:Well said--particularly the part about leaving positive feedback for the prof's tenure file. As students and clerkship applicants, we tend to ask, ask, ask, so it is nice to be able to give a little now and then when the opportunity arises.Danteshek wrote: Honesty is the best policy. If you are getting the professor's help in the context of writing a Note for your journal, it is understood that the professor is working in an advisory capacity only. If the professor does a very good job advising you, and that professor does not have tenure, I would suggest sending an email to the appropriate faculty member so that your thoughts can be included in that professors tenure review file.
As far as leaving positive feedback, you can ask any professor who the appropriate faculty member is (probably the head of the tenure committee).
- A'nold
- Posts: 3617
- Joined: Sat Oct 04, 2008 9:07 pm
Re: publishing as a law student
Oh yeah, I think I must have asked something I didn't mean to. I already have a topic going strong right now. Thanks for the advice and how to talk up the professor to the tenure committee (person?).A'nold wrote:Think about what makes you tick, and write about that. I'm already planning my next article. And I'm also doing a Daily Journal piece on the article I just completed.G. T. L. Rev. wrote:How would I go about doing this?Danteshek wrote:
Well said--particularly the part about leaving positive feedback for the prof's tenure file. As students and clerkship applicants, we tend to ask, ask, ask, so it is nice to be able to give a little now and then when the opportunity arises.
As far as leaving positive feedback, you can ask any professor who the appropriate faculty member is (probably the head of the tenure committee).
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Re: publishing as a law student
Excellent posts. I'd imagine most of the writing took place 2L year? Did anyone get started on the publication process as a 1L? Probably a bad idea considering how much 1L grades matter and how much time it would take to write and get published.
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Re: publishing as a law student
Maybe if you are at Yale you can start publishing as a 1L. If you go to a normal school, I would suggest picking your first topic in the Summer months after 1L. If you join a Journal, be sure to inform yourself of the policy w/r/t outside submission. Even if the policy is adverse to your goals, do not just lay over. You can always risk the wrath of the Law Review editorial board if you think taking that risk is worth it. Usually they will not be able to pull your credits without the faculty advisor's consent.adude wrote:Excellent posts. I'd imagine most of the writing took place 2L year? Did anyone get started on the publication process as a 1L? Probably a bad idea considering how much 1L grades matter and how much time it would take to write and get published.
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