Monday, August 29, 2011

Lawyer Identity Formation

Law school is a lawyer factory, and to make lawyers you have to shape and change the raw material... aka students.  This process is much harsher than it needs to be, resulting in widespread feelings of despair, anxiety, loss of a sense of self and loss of values.  As mentioned in previous posts, studies have shown that 44% of students are clinically distressed, and the trauma of law school contributes significantly to depression and substance abuse among lawyers.  But what is the process the school uses to change us?  Here are some of my preliminary thoughts on the methods used

  • Grades
    • Law school focuses on external motivators, like grades, to tell us how we are progressing in becoming lawyers.  The centrality of grades and the collective drive for the top grades pushes us to not only want good grades, but to start judging ourselves and our worth based on our grades.  Through the process we become disconnected from our original internal motivators, whatever they were, and start to focus on external symbols of our worth.  Thus, once we take up the new motivation, our identity shifts closer to the standard lawyer model.
    • Grades feel arbitrary, and this sense of loss of control can drive people up the wall.  They work themselves to an unhealthy level to try to attain some level of control.  This raises the level of anxiety and since we are expected to work at unhealthy levels we are taught that this is just a normal part of being a lawyer.
  • Lecture
    • The competition in some classes is palpable, especially where the Socratic Method is used.  Some students compete to preform in front of their peers, while a large segment simply withdraws from what feels like an unpleasant atmosphere in class.  Cynicism and a hyper-competitive atmosphere develop from this.
    • The details of what we are told lawyers do, think and behave greatly impacts how we form our identity.  The most prominent example from my first year was being told over and over again that the prime motivation of a lawyer is to win.  Winning at all costs excludes considerations like morals and the impact our actions have on others.
    • How questions are framed by professors and what information we are told is not important also greatly affect how we see lawyers.  Emotions are often (not always, but often) thought to be beside the point of what lawyers do.  
  • The content of classes, 
    • It focuses primarily on analytical and logical kinds of skills at the expense of interpersonal, experiential, and organizational skills.  This teaches us that lawyers prize analytical skills over client interaction skills, for example.
  • How professors interact with students
    • The aloofness and inaccessibility of many professors supports the perception that lawyers are inherently alienated from people.  
I'm sure there is more, but that is all that comes to mind right now.  Comment if you think of anything to add!

Sunday, August 7, 2011

March Hastings Herald Article

Last March I wrote an opinion piece for the first issue of the Hastings Herald. Here is a slightly changed version of it, the footnote format is alittle off, my apologies:

Humanizing Law School

Most people tell me that humanizing law school is impossible. Well, don’t lose hope, students of Hastings, change is in the air. There has been a surprising amount of movement on the issue in the law school industry. Recently, a mass of critical scholarly articles and books have been published calling for systemic and cultural reforms that would re-invent law school and the experience of its students. Some schools have started conducting pilot programs, and the top schools have abolished oppressive grading systems.

And it is about time. Rates of clinically significant levels of depression in law school can range as high as HALF of the student body. 1. Medical school, with its similar workload, has nowhere near the depression rates of law school. 1. This pain arises from the hyper-competition and excessive conformity that law school generates in otherwise happy and healthy people. 1. Put simply, this suffering is caused by the design of law school. 1. You know something is wrong with a pedagogical method when half the students who are subjected to it become mentally ill.

The culture of competition and conformity is the specter that stunts our school’s community and traumatizes our peers. 2. Students feel compelled to abandon their ideals and principles, to abandon their sense of self so they can fit into the “lawyer” mold. 2. I know I have been told over and over again that I will have to do things as a lawyer that violate my personal beliefs. Thinking like a lawyer is the primary objective, other pursuits need to fall away because if you aren’t thinking in that specific way, you won’t make the grade. This pressure to conform stifles creative thought and amounts to an all-out assault on our person-hood. 2. People literally lose themselves to law school, losing their self-identity to an institution-generated standard replacement identity. 2.

Identity is deeply intertwined with what motivates us. 2. Law school tends to quash our internal motivations (such as helping others or working for a cause) in favor of external motivations like grades, high profile internships, and high paying jobs after law school. 3. This happens to such an extent that students feel compelled to travel down a very uniform, risk-averse track and make choices that do not reflect their original reasons for going to law school. 2. The compulsion to avoid risks prevents students from taking innovative classes and pushing themselves to make the most of the opportunities afforded by law school. 2. But, I think what is worse is that the pedagogical style of law school conditions us to become insecure, anxious and unhappy. 3. All of this transfers into the legal profession as well, as the trauma of law school has a lasting impact on the psyche of lawyers as well as the practice of law in this country. 3.

By causing the loss of personal principles, self-identity, and purpose, law school emotionally scars its students. 4. All this pain disrupts our personal lives, but more importantly for the school, it hurts our ability to learn, retain and apply knowledge. 5. The policies and pedagogy of law school undermine the entire purpose of school.

Needless to say, when I read about all this, I was quite disturbed. I have noticed the effect law school has had on me, and it has been both scary and enraging. I am sure some people will respond with, “if you don’t like the heat, get out of the kitchen.” Well, this is bigger than just me, this problem affects the entire legal profession. 1. My own brief research has just scratched the surface of these issues, but it seems apparent that humanizing law school is the inevitable path that Hastings must take. Indeed, Hastings has already implemented programs meant to help students and address these problems (like the fantastic Academic Support Program). But further change in the policies, pedagogy and culture of law school is necessary, and to have that we must have a campus-wide discussion. To further that discussion, here are some questions:

What changes can we implement to address these problems?
What would a humanized law school look like?
What specific skills do you wish law school would teach?
Which classes were the most effective at teaching and why?
What are the aspects of law school that you love?
I want to hear your opinions, send in letters to the editor or shoot me an email at pasleyw@uchastings.edu.

Footnotes:
1. Peterson, Todd; Peterson, Elizabeth Stemming the Tide of Law Student Depression: What Law Schools Need to Learn from the Science of Positive Psychology. Yale Journal of Health Policy, Law & Ethics, Issue 2 (2009) (http://www.abajournal.com/uploads/2010/06/PetersonArticle.pdf) Sadly this link no longer works. I have a PDF copy if you want to read it, just shoot me an email.

2. Sturm , Susan; Guinier, Lani; The Law School Matrix: Reforming Legal Education in a Culture ofCompetition and Conformity, Vanderbilt Law Review, Vol. 60, No. 2, p. 515, 2007 (http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1018085)


3. Sheldon, Kennon; Krieger, Lawrence , Does Legal Education have Undermining Effects on Law Students? Evaluating Changes in Motivation, Values, and Well-Being. Behavioral Sciences and the Law 22: 261–286 (2004) (http://web.missouri.edu/~sheldonk/pdfarticles/BSL04.pdf)

4. Krieger, Lawrence, Human Nature as a New Guiding Philosophy for Legal Education and the Profession. Washburn Law Journal, Vol. 47, 247-312, 2008 (http://washburnlaw.edu/wlj/47-2/articles/krieger-lawrence.pdf)

5. Fines, Barbara, Fundamental Principles and Challenges of Humanizing Legal Education. Washburn Law Journal, Vol. 47, 313-326, 2008 (http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/profiles/glesnerfines/humanizing.pdf)

Sunday, July 31, 2011

Strategic Plan

Hastings is currently considering its first strategic plan, as this blog has mentioned before. Their website is here: http://www.uchastings.edu/strategic-planning/
They have not released more than a preliminary draft, which is here: http://www.uchastings.edu/strategic-planning/docs/SP_draft_vision_Faculty_SubCommittee.pdf

This draft includes many fantastic innovations, including focusing more on the practical side of education lawyers, putting student welfare as a top priority, and an explicit statement for the need for a shift away from the old paradigm of legal education. A new emphasis on different kinds of skills beyond the analytical and logical skills is a welcome change.

But it clearly comes from the faculty's point of view. There is only one page concerning student welfare, and very little discussion of the culture of law school and its serious negative impact on students. Changes to the curriculum will be immensely impacted by the culture and will flop if the plan does not incorporate cultural change.
I highly suggest you give it a look over and post your thoughts on the subject.

Saturday, July 9, 2011

Reforming the Culture Part 2: Solutions

Hastings is embarking on a major curricular shift in the next few years. Our school's first ever Strategic Plan is currently being drafted and if the vision statement they posted on their website is any indication, it intends to change the curriculum some. These reforms will fail if they do not address and alter the culture in the school. Law school culture poses a direct threat to any reforms of the curriculum. The external reward system of "being the best" replaces any vision of personal and professional responsibility or personal values and judgments, and therefore any reform that goes outside of the strict pathway toward "being the best" will be marginalized and remain mostly un-utilized by students.

So how do we change a culture focused on a rank-based competitive reward system? How do we encourage students to take risks with the classes and programs they become involved in? The authors of The Law School Matrix: Reforming Legal Education in a Culture of Competition and Conformity make several suggestions. Their prime suggestion is to focus on cultural change.

They emphasize three areas of mismatch present in law school:
1. The Pedagogical Mismatch. A mismatch between "student idealism (why we came to law school) and what we still mostly study in the identity forming first year"
2. The Training Mismatch. The substance of what we are taught and what young lawyers find useful.
3. The Professionalism Mismatch. The mismatch between the career path law school pushes students onto and the real range of legal need and work in the real world.
The authors note that many reforms have attempted to address some of or all of these mismatches without getting at the root of the culture. All of these mismatches should be addressed in any reform effort, as they are deeply involved with the way students interact with school.

The incentive structure is the next focus. They are skeptical of any reform efforts that do not address the underlying incentive structure present for both students and faculty. Without a fundamental change to the incentive structures, hierarchies of excellence will still be the focus, and any threat or risk to a professor or a student's position in the hierarchy will be marginalized. Incentive structures should be reshaped to integrate the intellectual, personal and professional development of students. They should be "tailored to the learning goals and multiple forms of practice" and push students to use their legal imaginations and take risks in their education.
Translating this advice into the Hastings environment, this means Hastings needs to stop ranking students based on GPA, or anything else for that matter. The curve should be abandoned, because its primary impact is to generate competition and fear. Right now grades feel arbitrary to students and students get very little feedback from professors. ABC grades are impersonal and give only minimal useful feedback to the student about how they are doing, and no sense of how they can improve. A pass/fail system with written feedback about what areas students need to improve in would be a sensible place to start in the design of a new a new grading system.

All stake-holders need to participate in the reform process, according to the authors. This includes students, faculty, alumni as well as those outside the school, such as lawyers, legislators and judges who narrate the law.
Hastings has already done a fairly good job involving students and faculty in the process. Students have been surveyed for input and there is an email address to send suggestions. The faculty have been presented with a draft, and have given their suggestions. I do not know if alumni or other groups have been contacted, but it would be a good idea.

Expand the reform project to include locations outside the classroom and curriculum. Any location that generates culture is game. The authors specifically note incentive structures that define legal education as the technical mastery of the law apart from normative commitments. The emphasis on high student/faculty ratios and unitary grading policies in another important target. Teaching styles that disconnect students from clinical and experiential learning should also be addressed.


Since many law students internalize the law school culture within the first three weeks, this is the crucial point where change is needed. The first year curriculum needs to get away from the Langdell style and execution. Students need to do clinical work their first semester (such as a GAAP-based clinic). The discourse from professors needs to shift from a focus on winning litigation and defeating your opponent to an emphasis on ethical behavior, lawyers being protectors and high-minded professionals. Positive identity-formation that resonates with student's initial identities and internal motivations is essential for the first semester. The authors suggest that the first year be broadened pedagogically, experientially, and substantively to embrace the wide range of meanings and purposes of the law. The emphasis on adversarialism needs to shift to a multi-approach focus. The law's normative responsibility must also be central in the process of identity formation.

Overall, the authors emphasize that this will be a slow and continuous process. It will need to continue beyond the implementation of the the strategic plan. To sum up their findings, the authors created a table in the appendix, on page 553, that outlines a reimagined school this way:

Role of Law: Law as a Plural and Contested Concept that involves reconciling multiple forms of authority, rethinking metrics of symbolic legitimacy, and expanding public problem-solving to foster continuous inquiry about law’s meaning and role, including the relationship between the “is,” the “ought” and the “what might be.”
Pedagogical Goal: Building analytic, strategic, institutional, and problem solving capacity; Developing legal imagination.
Role of Conflict: Multiple forms and formats of conflict explored.
Modeling Expertise: Contextually and collectively constructed, includes ability to exercise leadership in addressing important social problems.
Integration of Personal, Professional, and Academic Goals: Integrated and interrogated through collaboration among faculty, administrators, practitioners, and students.
Evaluating Success: Integrating evaluation into the learning process; Connecting success to personal aspirations and social goals.

Now that is a law school I would love to be a student in.

Wednesday, July 6, 2011

Reforming the Culture of Competition and Conformity (Part 1)

The culture of law school is at the core of the problem. In The Law School Matrix: Reforming Legal Education in a Culture of Competition and Conformity, Professor Susan Strum of Columbia Law and Professor Lani Guinier of Harvard Law describe the genesis of this culture, and the feedback loop between the curriculum and the culture. This feedback loop has kept law school curriculum and teaching methods amazingly static over the past century. The takeaway message from this article is that to reform law school, you cannot just focus on the curriculum, but you have to address the culture and make efforts to shift it if any reforms are going to take hold.

The source of the culture of competition and conformity is the law school matrix, which is a series of institutional systems, methods and cultural practices/rituals and reinforce this culture and maintain the current law school system.

The authors list a series of recent curricular reforms that would benefit from a focus on cultural reform. In general, the goal of these reforms has been to expose students to a broader range of knowledge and skills as well as foster a stronger legal imagination in students. The following are a few example:
* Expansion of the topics covered by curriculum beyond the traditional adjudication and courtroom focus (a focus which is increasingly has become less and less central to the practice of law over the last 50 years). This kind of reform seeks to development of a wider range of skills and wider forms of knowledge. New courses such as problem solving strategies, comparative law, public law, transactional work, international law
* Expanded clinical and externship programs so students are exposed to what lawyers actually do.
* Reducing class size and more interactive and problem-oriented pedagogy.

Hastings is attempting several of these approaches to reform, and I fear unless we confront the problems with the culture, these reforms will fail. As a human guinea pig in the Law in Context program that Hastings attempted last year, I can see how a focus on a building a better culture would have gone a long way from preventing the failure of the program.

The culture we are confronted with is defined as "the incentive structures, peer pressure, dominant rituals, unspoken habits of thought that construct and then define the interpersonal, institutional and cognitive behaviors and beliefs of members of the educational community." This culture is as much unconscious and unseen as it is a conscious endeavor. To change this culture, the authors suggest we target its sources:

Metrics of success are at the core of the cultural production, as they set up incentive structures which in turn moderate student and faculty behavior. These metrics include grades, performance in class, journals, moot court, clerkships, internships, jobs, and after graduation, money and status. There is little feedback for students outside of these, which encourages students to develop an unhealthy attachment to these external motivators as opposed to embracing their internal motivations. The fact that every metric of success is a competition against everyone else is a central reason why law school feels so competitive. Not everyone gets Bs even if everyone does grade B work, and not everyone gets into Journal or Moot Court. Moreover, "success" is defined as a combination of these metrics and only so many people will manage to be "successful" leaving the rest of us as "failures." These distinctions are completely arbitrary and incredibly damaging to students. The emotional scars from this can last a lifetime and create widespread emotional devastation throughout the legal profession. Is it any wonder lawyers are so prone to alcohol abuse?

The way learning in structured produces a significantly competitive culture. There are implicit rules in any social situation that we absorb through simply being there. In the law school classroom context, where students learn collectively through questioning by the professor, students learn what to value through how the professor moves the discussion, what questions the professor asks, and the assumptions made by the group. The values and assumptions that law school holds and imbues students with are usually very different than the values that students entered school with. I know these values were and are quite different than my personal values. More than that, the metrics of success and the structure of learning encourage students to define their sense of self based on how well they "get it" as measured by their performance in the classroom and their "success." The pressure to "get it", compete and keep up with everyone comes to define the law school experience.

The role of conflict is central in law school, being built into the classroom environment itself. The litigation-centric curriculum and emphasis on the adversarial framework generates competitive feelings throughout the student body and imbues us with a sense that truth is established through competition (a notion which to any scientist is obviously false). The Socratic method trains us to seek out weaknesses and validate "winning" arguments, where winning can feel arbitrarily defined. Such a single-minded focus on this method trains students to view conversation as a battle they must compete in to "win" the conversation and be validated as intelligent and worthy. It also encourages students to identify good lawyering with quick-witted verbal reparte instead of deliberate, thoughtful and moral thinking. That skill may be useful for trial advocacy, but most lawyers do not go to court anymore. The conflict-centric method of teaching creates the assumption in students that conflicts are resolved through competition with a win-lose outcome. That is not the reality of the world, where the overwhelming majority of cases settle and alternative dispute resolution is becoming more and more common. The authors go on to tie links to the grading process and court-centric curriculum in explaining that students are discouraged from considering other forms of inquiry into a problem, such as from a moral point of view. An adversarial centric framework also pushes out other frameworks, such as: deliberative, legislative, transactional, collaborative, and restorative approaches to problem solving. Needless to say, the adversarial method is not the most commonly used method in real life, or the most productive to solve problems.

The prevailing notions of expertise that professors present is one of detached logical mastery. They focus single-mindedly on doctrine and analytical skills at the expense of other essential skills, such as interactive, interpersonal, organizational and other non-doctrinal elements of life as a lawyer. Is it any wonder that law firms complain that new graduates are poorly prepared for practice? The intellectual mastery notion of expertise that professors present pushes students to search for what they think the professor wants to hear and devalue our own thoughts on the subject. The same is true of our classmates' opinions, as most students turn off when other students speak and wait for the professor to validate what they have said.
More frightening to me is the lack of interest that professors show in the development of students as learners and lawyers. Everything beyond the classroom environment is beyond the responsibility of the professor. This detachment also discourages students from attending office hours. I have read several studies, including the Henderson Report which state that student performance is immensely impacted by how much they perceive that their teachers care about them and their success. And the few faculty that do devote time to students do so at their own "expense" as they are not rewarded by the institution, and actually punished because they have less time for their core functions of scholarship and in-class teaching.

The segmentation of dimensions of learning into the intellectual, professional and personal fragments how we see the world. With professors not taking any interest in our professional or personal development, the intellectual/academic sphere is separated into the classroom environment where personal view and professional aspirations are not valued or relevant. We are not given the opportunity to make sense of how what we learn in class integrates with practice or our personal values.
The professional development agencies in our school (i.e. career services) seem to focus on short-term placement and less on getting to know us as people and advise us on long-term career options. Since interviews and corporate wining and dining are one of the few validating experiences law students get, we are vulnerable to the trap of changing our identity to fit with a corporate ideal. The seemingly irrelevance of our personhood to both the classroom and the job hunt deadens our moral sensibilities and is profoundly discouraging for students who had real goals before law school.

The incentive structure is the last factor. Closely related to the metrics of success, this system pushes both faculty and students into this unhealthy culture of competition and conformity. Students feel like they can't take risks or they won't "succeed," so they try to conform to what feels like the safe path, because everyone is taking that path. Faculty are pushed by the appointment and tenure system as well as scholarship demands. And people start to look at their rank in the performance index to determine their self-worth and self-esteem. Everyone who goes to Hastings is brilliant and capable, why do we embrace a system that makes us feel like failures? The incentive structure for both students and faculty needs a drastic overhaul.


Anyone who goes to law school can attest at how painful it is, and that pain comes from this corrosive culture that undermines our identity, self-esteem and values. It substitutes external motivations for our own internal morals and motivations and emotionally scars us. Students become desensitized to their internal moral compass and rely on external metrics to determine our self-worth. Law school causes us to lose touch with who we are, and live lives we are not fully comfortable with. As lawyers we become further demoralized and our sense of being lost increases. The damage law school causes reverberates through the entire profession.

Next post will discuss the changes that the authors suggest.

Saturday, July 2, 2011

The Hidden Sources of Law School Stress.

This booklet, written by the brilliant Lawrence S. Krieger, provides a fantastic explanation of the basic analysis explaining why law students are mentally harmed by our schools. Here is my summary.

Excessive stress is the primary culprit, and it has numerous sources:

Confused priorities that cause students prioritize studying over everything else, causing us to loose sleep, eat terribly, and isolate ourselves.

False values, that supplant our original values during law school, cause a loss of identity which leads to stress, anxiety and loss of self-esteem. It is important to realize that grades to not define you or your worthiness as a person. High grades, salary and a high-status job do not create happiness. Happiness comes from intrinsic motivators, such as "personal growth, close relationships or improving the community." This is perhaps the most crucial point, the competition for grades is going to cause you to be unhappy. This does not mean don't try, but it means that competing should not be your reason for trying. Aligning yourself with intrinsic motivators will make you happier and healthier and able to preform better.

Thinking Like A Lawyer, something we are constantly told to aspire to do in law school, causes a myriad of hidden stresses. It causes us to lose faith in our own thinking ability, and lose touch with our beliefs and values, which have no place in a lawyer's thought processes. Losing confidence in our values causes loss of identity, which is a stress fountain in itself.
An emphasis on thinking like a lawyer also teaches us to take the emotion out of often very emotional situation. Dampening your outrage and sense of right and wrong undermines our personality and identity and causes a disconnection between our behavior and our conscience. Anyone wonder where the immoral lawyer stereotype comes from?

Thinking like a lawyer also teaches an adversarial demeanor, and as you become more critical of those around you and aggressive/defensive, you will become more isolated and lonely. That causes depression.

The Fear of Failure and unrelenting need to get high grades can drive a need for and illusion of control of circumstances beyond our control. This causes students to spend excessive and unhealthy amounts of time studying under the illusion that doing so will produce high grades. We must realize that there are things beyond our control and a better strategy is to moderate expectations to match our inability to control events. The reality of dealing with the court system is that it is beyond our control, accepting this fact early will serve us well. Keeping a positive mindset will allow you to shrug off setbacks and is a priceless asset when on the hunt for a job.

Distractions can feel like an escape, but they can really produce more stress then they let off. There are ways to relieve stress that work, such as walks and socializing. Substance abuse is often a contributing factor to Lawyers losing their license, so avoid using law school to justify substance abuse. Substance abuse is also linked to depression and to increasing depression in a cyclical fashion.

HUGE Debt is, very understandably, very stressful. Live frugally, but comfortably. Investigate pay-off options and loan cancellation for after law school. Knowing what your options are will alleviate alot of stress. You will be able to pay it off, no fear.

Lying also produces significant stress as it breaks your integrity and can harm your self-identity and personality.

Knowing what you are getting into is important. During law school you are setting the stage for the life style of your professional life. I highly recommend this booklet, every law student (and lawyer for that matter) should read it. Here is the link again http://mailer.fsu.edu/~lkrieger/images/lawschoolstress.pdf

Starting Up.

This blog is to be used to further a new curriculum at UC Hastings College of the Law. Law school is needlessly harmful to student well-being and the aim of this website is to change that.
The basic goal is to convince the students, faculty and administration to adopt a New Curriculum that will address the harms caused to students and the lack of practical training present in the law school curriculum.
This will be a multi-year process and will require significant student buy-in to be successful. Step one is to become acquainted with the research that is already out there and make summaries of it available to the student body.