Making Eye Contact

I read about an interesting study on eye contact that was posted today on the legal writing listserv, “Why Eye Contact Can Fail to Win People Over.” The article refers to a study conducted in Germany where university students were polled about their opinions on controversial topics and then asked to watch a two-minute video on these topics. When the students agreed with viewpoint being expressed, they were more likely to look at the eyes of the speaker expressing the opinion, and less likely when they disagreed or felt neutral.

The students were also less likely to change their opinions, as measured in a second poll, when they looked directly in the speakers’ eyes. This was particularly true when the person in the video looked directly at viewers, rather than to the side of the frame.

Then in a second study, students were asked to look either at a person’s eyes or mouth.

The students who looked at the speakers’ eyes changed their attitudes less than the people who looked at the speakers’ mouths. They also said they were less interested in hearing more about the views presented.

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From the Mouths of 1Ls: More Six-Word Stories

A couple of weeks ago, I posted about a challenge to write six-word stories about law school or the law.  That post inspired many creative six-word stories, which you can read in the comments to that post.  The post and its idea were picked up by other blogs, including the Wall Street Journal law blog, the Wall Street Journal print edition on Monday, September 23, 2013, Above the Law, TaxProf blog, and the ABA Law News Now.

Below are some of the six-word stories submitted by my first-year legal analysis, writing & research students. I hope you’ll add your own in the comments.

New analysis, old logic, law school.

Adam Vanderwerff

 

Wish I knew contracts like Kingsfield.

Alexa Callahan

 

This isn’t quite like Legally Blonde.

Alexa Callahan

 

Helen Palsgraf shouldn’t have stood there.

Kelly Pingel

 

Student focused. Eckstein prepared. Challenge accepted.

Josh Lurie

 

Where I became a caffeine junkie.

Brycen Breazeale

 

Come to our meeting, free food!

Larry Whitley

 

Law school: life experience, life changing.

Jordan Feest

 

Yes, overwhelming; yet, so extremely rewarding.

Ian Kalis

 

Challenging and new; focus, get through.

Kyle Thelen

 

Shaping legal landscapes from grass clippings.

Molly Madonia

 

Coffee read read read read coffee.

Rex Hupy

 

The law is a fickle beast.

Jordana Rostant-Nunes

 

I’m having 1L of a ride.

Trace Hummel

 

Law—compromise of mind and heart.

Jessica Jurevis

 

More you learn. Less you know.

Cassie Van Gompel

 

Legal education: a complete mental metamorphosis.

Asma Kadri

 

Who is this magical reasonable person?

John Woodson

 

School was easy. Then things changed.

Craig Dietrich

 

 

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What’s in a Name? Abbreviating Case Names

My first-year law students are beginning to learn about legal citation.  Today we discussed a question that sometimes causes confusion:  whether to abbreviate the first word of a case name.  The answer requires a student to synthesize a few rules from the Bluebook.

Bluebook Rule 10.2.2 states that all words listed in Table 6 (the table of abbreviations) must be abbreviated, even the first word in a party name.  Table 6 notes that a word of eight letters (or more) may be abbreviated at the author’s discretion if substantial space is saved.  Abbreviated words are punctuated by a period, unless the abbreviation is formed with an apostrophe (Corp., but Ass’n).

Continue ReadingWhat’s in a Name? Abbreviating Case Names