Dear 1L: Part 2 of 3 Oral Argument Tips
Dear 1L,
Here is Part 2 of 3: Tips to help you prepare for oral argument.*
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TIP 4: KNOW YOUR JUDGES WELL
Picking up where Part 1 left off . . .
š¹ Find out in advance how the individual judges have ruled on issues relevant to your case, and prepare how you might use that on argument day.
āļø When a judge is predisposed to rule against you, you might raise one of their past decisions to assist in answering their questions. If you explain (politely) why their ruling against you in your case would be inconsistent with their prior decision, you might just turn them around to your side.
š¹ Learn each judgeās name and how they want to be addressed. Know where they sit on the panel so that you can address them appropriately in response to their questioning.
āļø Practice addressing them by name (unless, of course, you have learned that they prefer to be addressed otherwise).
In the words of Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr.,
When I used to argue cases around the country, I would always go out a day early, sit in on a court session, and talk to the bailiff . . . How do the judges like to be addressed? . . . As āYour Honorā? . . . As āJudgeā? . . .
And when you do that, the judge doesnāt notice anything, and thatās fine. . . When you donāt do it, he notices it, for whatever reason, and itās a distraction . . . .
To the extent those thingsālittle tiny thingsābecome distractions, thatās not good.
(See Garner, infra, at 13-14.)
TIP 5: KNOW YOUR COURT
Visit the argument site in advance.
āļø Learn where you will sit and where you will stand. Become comfortable at the podium. Spend time in the room. Absorb it. Own it. This will help you feel more comfortable on argument day.
āļø Also know how your court allocates its rebuttal time. Every court does it a little differently.
TIP 6: WATCH HOW ITāS DONE
Seeing how other arguments have proceeded will help you feel more confident in your own one.
āļø Find videos of top students competing in moot court competitions to watch oral advocacy in a setting like yours.
āļø Read transcripts of past arguments in cases like yoursāsee what worked, what didnāt, and get ideas and inspiration.
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*As stated in Part 1, these tips are a synthesis of:
ā«ļø several dozen comments from oral advocates in response to my original post;
ā«ļø an excellent article by Heidi Brown;
ā«ļø a power-packed podcast by Jonah Perlin; and
ā«ļø an interview with Chief Justice John Roberts, as reported by Bryan Garner in The Scribes Journal of Legal Writing (vol. 13, 2010)
Heartfelt thanks and appreciation to all contributors.
Fondly,
Amanda
P.S. Follow ā> #Dear1L (898 followers) to receive future letters.
P.P.S. To review original comments in their full form, see the original thread and Part 1 of this post (links in comments).