First Week Assignment and
Expert Learning Program (Ex-L)

Photograph: Students in study group during their first week at Washburn Law.The Expert Learning Program (Ex-L) at Washburn Law is our academic success program:

Our two-part program is designed to help you develop autonomous, reflective learning skills needed to succeed in law school, on the bar exam and in law practice. The following letter from Professor Schwartz describes the Ex-L Program in more detail.

Prepare the Following for Monday, August 18, 2008

See below for text #1, #2, and #3 ordering information.

Ex-L at Washburn Law

Congratulations on your admission to Washburn University School of Law! I have taught law for seventeen years so I know how excited you are about what the next few months and years in law school and, eventually, in law practice, will bring. In fact, I recommend that you frequently remind yourselves of the goals and habits that led to your admission into law school: motivation and hard work.

I am a Professor of Law, who will be the contracts professor for half of you, and the director of Ex-L at Washburn University School of Law, a cutting-edge program designed to provide you the tools you need to succeed in law school and on the bar exam. I am writing to describe the two programs that make up Ex-L, the First Week Program and The Structured Study Group Program, and to give you some preliminary suggestions about managing your workload.

In the past few months, you probably have begun wondering what it takes to succeed in law school. Why do some smart people excel in law school and other, equally smart people struggle? What do the successful law students know that their peers do not?

The answer may surprise you. When you arrive on August 18 to start law school, your undergraduate grade point average and your LSAT score become old news. At that moment, you need to quickly develop the skills necessary for success in law school--the ability to manage the heavy law school workload, the motivation to work hard and the ability to study and learn law and legal analysis skills effectively and efficiently.

During Washburn's First Week Program and throughout the semester in Washburn's Structured Study Group Program, you will work on building and, hopefully, mastering these skills. Both of these programs have been designed based on a series of educational studies that have found that this approach is the best way to maximize students' chances to succeed in law school.

The moment you arrive on campus the morning of August 18, you will be starting the First Week Program. During this first week, you will be learning about the law school, about legal education, and about the resources available at Washburn to help you maximize your learning.

You will also begin your study of law. However, these initial class sessions will be slightly different than your later class sessions because we will be working with you to help you build the thinking, case reading, case briefing and other skills you will need to succeed in all your first-year law school classes.

On your first day of the First Week Program, you will also start the Structured Study Group Program. You will be placed in a small "law firm" of five or six students. Your firm will be led by a successful, carefully-trained and closely-supervised upper division law student whose job is to make sure that your group and all of its members:

REMINDER: Do not purchase textbooks for any other classes prior to check-in on the morning of August 18.

To order these books from Carolina Academic Press:

Note: Carolina typically ships books ordered online by the next business day (UPS Ground, 5-7 day delivery).

So that I can intervene when necessary, the study group leaders also report to me throughout the semester about students who are struggling to learn or who are not able to complete their group work.

Both these programs will make demands of you. For example, you need to purchase the texts listed below and complete the described assignments by August 18. Both texts and the workbook are available online through the publisher, Carolina Academic Press:

If you have any questions about law school, the Ex-L Program, these assignments, or anything else, please feel free to contact me by e-mail at michael.schwartz [at] washburn.edu.

I look forward to working with you.

Sincerely,

Professor Michael Hunter Schwartz
Professor of Law, Associate Dean for Faculty and Academic Development

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