"Danger, Will Robinson!"

This ABA CLE appeals to my geekier side!

A Discussion of Cutting-Edge Issues in AI and Robotics Law

Date: Tuesday, May 13, 2008
Format: Teleconference and Live Audio Webcast
Duration: 60 minutes

I am grateful for opportunities to apply positive psychology!

I have had wonderful opportunities to apply positive psychology in recent months, and the schedule ahead suggests those opportunities will continue:

Culver Academies Faculty Workshop, Culver, IN, 6/11-13, 2007 (Workshop)

Culver Summer Camps Staff Workshop, Culver, IN, 6/13-15, 2007 (Workshop)

The Lawrenceville School Positive Psychology Conference, Lawrenceville, NJ, 6/16-18 (Participant)

United Kingdom Teacher Training, Penn Resiliency Program, Philadelphia,  PA, 7/21-8/3/2007 (Facilitator)

Tennessee District Attorney Generals Conference, Capital Case Litigation Conference, Nashville, TN, 8/6/2007 (Speaker)

Penn Center for School Study Councils, South Jersey Superintendents Study Council, Sewell, New Jersey, 9/11/2007(Workshop)

"Positive Psychology and the Law",  Nashville School of Law,  6:30 pm, 9/26/2007 (Speaker)

Coaches Workshop, Culver Academy, Culver, IN, 10/3-4/2007 (Consulting)

"Getting to 'Why?'"  TBA Young Lawyers Division seminar, 10/25/2007

Victim/Witness Services Retreat, Nashville DA's Officce, 10/19/2007 (Workshop)

"Lawyers as Peacemakers, Lawyers as Problemsolvers", Memphis, TN, 10/28-29/2007 (Speaker)

"Government Lawyers CLE", Nashville Bar Association, 11/30/2007 (Speaker)

Penn Center for School Study Councils, South Jersey Superintendents Study Council, Sewell, New Jersey, 12/11/2007(Workshop)

Wellbeing at Geelong Grammar School, Australia, 1/21-31/2008 (Facilitator for faculty training)

Penn Center for School Study Councils, South Jersey Superintendents Study Council, Sewell, New Jersey, 2/12/2008 (Speaker)

"A Great Start", TBA Young Lawyers Seminar Nashville, TN (webcast to Memphis and Knoxville)2/15/2008 (Speaker) 

Penn Center for School Study Councils, South Jersey Superintendents Study Council, New Jersey, 5/13/2008 (Workshop)

What CLE is most important?

Cle_energy_3 Recently, I have asked the following question of a number of attorneys in CLE programs and at a meeting of MCLE regulators from around the country.  Each time, I've gotten similar responses.  Overwhelmingly, lawyers, and those who regulate CLE, recognize that it is NOT lack of substantive knowledge and it is NOT poor legal management skills that most often cause poor results for clients.  Rather, poor results most frequently result when a lawyer's commitment, energy, and engagement are too low.

Positive psychology offers some avenues to address this situation.  Positive emotions, according to Barbara Fredrickson's research, broaden our thought/action repretoire and help us build social and psychological capitol for the future.  Happiness, as measured by the Authentic Happiness Index (check yours at www.authentichappiness.org) includes engagement and meaning.  Engaged individuals who experience flow in their day-to-day activities have energy.  Individuals who feel connected to something bigger and greater than themselves have commitment to carry through. 

We need CLE that focuses on helping lawyers develop commitment, energy, and engagement.  And we need to accredit such CLE.  Unfortunately, most MCLE regulators indicate that such programs would have difficulty getting accredited in their states.  That needs to change.

From Moral Partners to a Moral Firm

A Google News Alert I have set for MCLE matters brought this Law.com article to my attention.

I am not arguing one way or another on this.  But I do think that in this matter, as in some other areas, it is appropriate and responsible for decision makers to revisit from time-to-time long-past decisions to see if they still seem to be the most appropriate compromises in light of the current structure, role, and public standing of the profession.

When war stories made great CLE

Justice_at_dachauLast Tuesday, the 10th, I participated in a CLE program that was the exception to the rule that "war stories" are not good CLE.  "War stories" are anecdotes about a trial or other experience in representing a client.  Often, these stories, while entertaining, primarily serve to make the storyteller look good.  They lack educational value.

This program, "To Do Justice", was different.  It was put together by Douglas Bates, III, a Centerville, TN, lawyer whose father, Douglas Bates, II, was defense counsel for the 40 defendants in the first American war crimes trial of Nazis after World War II.  Joshua Greene, author of the book shown at the right, and producer of the acclaimed "Voices from the Holocaust" documentary, contacted Doug Bates on 9/11/2001 to ask him about his dad.  Professor Greene had just finished reading the transcript of the first Dachau trial at the invitation of the widow of the prosecuting attorney, Bill Denson, and wanted to know what Doug knew of his father's role in that trial.  Greene and Bates became friends, and Doug Bates conceived the idea of bringing Joshua Greene to Nashville for a CLE program built around the Dachau trial.  Monday evening (the 9th) and Tuesday saw the fruition of that dream.

Continue reading "When war stories made great CLE" »

Louisiana State Bar Association

I was contacted several weeks ago about consulting on a contract through the National Center for State Courts with the Louisiana State Bar Association.  It was to entail five days or so on-site, hopefully in August, but there was a re-work of the team that delayed the contract.  I think it's finished now, but since the bar center is right in downtown New Orleans, we obviously won't be down there anytime soon. 

My counterpart in Louisiana sent got an e-mail out that she had safely evacuated to Houston.  That's good news, but it's hard to grasp the pictures I'm seeing of the devastation to that beautiful city.  Here's hoping they can get the water out soon and that recovery won't be as difficult as it now appears.  They're saying two months before schools can re-open!

And thanks to all the disaster workers headed that way.  The beautiful and patient Teresa asked me if, when Patrick's off to college, if I'd join her in volunteering for a disaster recovery team.  She's always wanted to do that.  Absolutely.  With her people skills, organizational ability, and level headedness, she'd be great, and I'd certainly do whatever I could.

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