Dear 1L, š Get your sample 1L Memo hereā
Dear 1L,
As you know, law-school ethics codes prevent anyone from assisting with specific, 1L writing assignments before final drafts are submitted.
I see these memos after-the-fact, when I help students with job applications.
Attached is my best representation of what 1L professors are looking for.
It is based on what Iāve seen and what dozens of students have told me during the past few years.
Itās also a composite of a style compatible with the various acronymsāIRAC/CREAC, etc.āthat professors teach.
***
Caveats:
1ļøā£ The facts, law, court cases, and quotations in the Sample are fictional.
āPlease use the Sample for illustrative purposes as to structure and writing style only, not for legal doctrine or analysis (it is fiction).
2ļøā£ In reality, litigators do not often write formal, objective memoranda, and they do less so today than in the past.
āWhen we do conduct a legal analysis, we also usually focus on procedural posture and standard of review. You will focus on those things more in the spring.
3ļøā£ In the interest of getting this to you when you need it, I have not created citations or proofread for perfection. (I welcome any typo sightingsāpreferably by DM. š)
4ļøā£ MOST IMPORTANT: If my model is inconsistent in any way with what YOUR specific professor instructs, follow what YOUR professor instructs.
I do think this should get you started, though.
Iām sending you all positive energy through this process.
Fondly,
š Amanda
PLEASE share to help more 1Ls. #Dear1L
š³ļø 1Ls: What questions do you have for me?
ā Litigators: When was the last time you wrote from scratch without good models? (I remember, and itās not fun.)