Legal Research Sample
Legal Research Sample
Legal Research Sample
2010
Recommended Citation
Valentine, Sarah, "Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill: A Lifeboat for Students and Law Schools" (2010). CUNY Academic Works.
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LEGAL RESEARCH AS A FUNDAMENTAL SKILL: A
LIFEBOAT FOR STUDENTS AND LAW SCHOOLS
Sarah Valentinet
I. INTRODUCTION
Law schools are confronting a sea change in their educational
responsibilities as they contend with calls to instill skills training in
addition to teaching doctrine and analysis. In addition, ever-growing
waves of information are overwhelming law students, eroding their
research skills, and weakening their ability to learn legal analysis.'
Legal research, recognized and taught as both a legal and a lawyering
skill, can be a lifeboat for law schools and law students riding out this
storm.
In 2005, with the revision of Standard 302 governing accreditation,
the American Bar Association mandated skills training.2 In 2007,
two surveys of law teaching in the United States, Educating Lawyers3
and Best Practices for Legal Education,4 found that law schools often
fail to teach the skills necessary for the competent and ethical
practice of law.' Beyond laments about the lack of general lawyering
t Associate Law Library Professor and Legal Research Coordinator, City University of
New York School of Law. An early draft of this article was presented at the
Conference on Legal Information: Scholarship and Teaching, held at the University
of Colorado Law School in June 2009, as part of its Boulder Summer Conference
Series and was enriched by the feedback I received. I thank Barbara Bintliff for her
work organizing the conference and guiding the discussions. I would also like to
thank Shirley Lung for her insightful comments on an early draft of the piece and
Jessica Levy for proof reading and research assistance. In addition, my many
discussions with Rosalie Sanderson about research pedagogy have been both
enlightening and inspirational. Finally, this article has benefited greatly from the
support and encouragement of Ruthann Robson.
1. See infra Part II.C.
2. See Harriet N. Katz, Evaluating the Skills Curriculum:Challenges and Opportunities
for Law Schools, 59 MERCER L. REV. 909, 909 (2008) (noting that ABA Standard 302
was revised in 2005 to mandate skills training in law schools).
3. See generally WILLIAM M. SULLIVAN ET AL., EDUCATING LAWYERS: PREPARATION FOR
THE PROFESSION OF LAW (2007) [hereinafter CARNEGIE REPORT] (providing an
overview of the American Bar Association's mandate of skills training).
4. Roy STUCKEY ET AL., BEST PRACTICES FOR LEGAL EDUCATION (2007) [hereinafter
BEST PRACTICES].
5_ See id. at ll
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
skills, the bench and bar also routinely highlight the inadequacy of
the legal research skills of recent law graduates.6 The growth of in-
,school clinics, internships, and extemships has also surfaced
complaints about the research capabilities of law students.7
Dissatisfaction with legal research education has reached a point
where the ABA is seriously considering introducing a legal research
component on the bar exam.8
There are additional circumstances mandating the restructuring of
legal research. First, the growth of the administrative state requires
that all law students be provided training in statutory and regulatory
research earlier and at a level not often undertaken in the past.9 A
solid foundation in regulatory research can no longer be relegated to
the few who take an advanced legal research course. Second, law
schools are recognizing the impact of globalization and are beginning
to introduce first-year students to the basics of international and
foreign law.' ° Legal research courses must support the introduction
of this material by referencing it in the first year as well. Third, the
growth of the Internet and computerized research has broadened both
the type of information courts rely on and the type of research
6. See, e.g., Paul D. Callister, Beyond Training: Law Librarianship's Quest for the
Pedagogy of Legal Research Education, 95 LAW LIBR. J. 7, 9-11 (2003) (providing a
collection of anecdotes, studies, and reports, which address the absence of legal
research skills in both law students and law graduates).
7. See, e.g., Carolyn R. Young & Barbara A. Blanco, What Students Don't Know Will
Hurt Them: A Frank View from the Field on How to Better PrepareOur Clinic and
Externship Students, 14 CLINICAL L. REV. 105, 116-17 (2007) (noting a survey of
clinic and extern supervisors that listed legal research skills as one of those found
most lacking in their students).
8. See Erica Moeser, President's Page, THE BAR EXAMINER, May 2006, at 4, 5,
available at http://www.ncbex.org/the-bar-examiner/article-archive/ (remarking that
the National Conference of Bar Examiners began considering testing legal research on
the bar exam in 2006); Katie Flores, Bar Exam May Soon See Legal Research
Questions, DAILY TEXAN, Oct. 22, 2007, available at http://media.www.dailytexan
online.com/media/storage/paper4 10/news/2007/l 0/22/University/BarExam.May.Soon
.See.Legal.Research.Questions-3046333.shtml; see also Steven M. Barkan, Should
Legal Research Be Included on the Bar Exam? An Exploration of the Question, 99
LAW LIBR. J. 403 (2007).
9. Elizabeth Garrett, Teaching Law andPolitics, 7 N.Y.U. J. LEGIS. & PuB. POL'Y 11, 11
(2003-2004) (noting the importance of law schools providing classes in
administrative law during the first year); Ethan J. Leib, Adding Legislation Courses to
the First-Year Curriculum, 58 J. LEGAL EDUC. 166, 168 n.9 (2008) (listing schools
that have moved to change their curriculum to include and/or require administrative
and statutory law courses in the first year).
10. See Terry Hutchinson, Developing Legal Research Skills: Expanding the Paradigm,
32 MELB. U. L. REv. 1065, 1080 (2008).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
11. See Coleen M. Barger, On the Internet, Nobody Knows You're a Judge: Appellate
Courts' Use ofInternet Materials,4 J. APP. PRAC. & PROCESS 417, 422-28 (2002).
12. Marjorie Crawford, Bridging the Gap Between Legal Education and Practice:
Changes to the Way Legal Research is Taught to a New Generation of Students,
AALL SPECTRUM, April 2008, at 10.
13. Robert C. Berring, Legal Research and the World of Thinkable Thoughts, 2 J. APP.
PRAC. & PROCESS 305, 311 (2000) [hereinafter Berring, Thinkable Thoughts].
14. See id.
15. Katrina Fischer Kuh, ElectronicallyManufacturedLaw, 22 HARV. J.L. & TECH. 223,
226 (2008) (arguing that electronic legal research results in an increased diversity in
the selection of the legal theories through which to conceptualize facts, which leads to
advancement of marginal cases, theories, and arguments); Carol M. Bast & Ransford
C. Pyle, Legal Research in the Computer Age: A ParadigmShift? 93 LAw LIBR. J.
285, 297-98 (2001) (arguing that the rise in online legal researching creates an
environment in which the researcher focuses more on facts than legal concepts);
Robert C. Berring, Legal Information and the Searchfor Cognitive Authority, 88 CAL.
L. REV. 1673, 1675 (2000) [hereinafter Berring, Cognitive Authority] (arguing that
technology is changing the way legal authority is defined and used); Molly Warner
Lien, Technocentrism and the Soul of the Common Law Lawyer, 48 AM. U. L. REV.
85, 131-32 (1998) (positing that excessive reliance on the use of technology may
"overly emphasize rules and certainty at the expense of other goals and qualities we
value in lawyering and the legal system: creativity, justice, equity, compassion, and
the ability to discover our common fundamental values"). But cf Judith Lihosit,
Research in the Wild: CALR and the Role of Informal Apprenticeship in Attorney
Training, 101 LAW LIBR. J. 157, 158 (2009) (arguing that because attorneys form and
learn from social networks that provide research guidance, the effect of electronic
legal research on the structure of the law will not be calamitous as predicted).
16. See infra Part II.D (discussing the impact of technology on legal reasoning as it erodes
the neo-classical legal structures created by digest-based research).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
17. See Karen Gross, ProcessReengineering and Legal Education: An Essay on Daring
to Think Differently, 49 N.Y.L. Scn.L. REv. 435, 452-54 (2004-2005).
18. Professor Karen Gross discusses the importance of re-imagining (instead of merely
tweaking) the first year of legal education if students are to be able to achieve a more
conceptual and less compartmentalized understanding of the law. Id. at 436-38.
19. As used here "legal skills" denote skills necessary for legal reasoning and analysis
while "lawyering skills" denote more discrete skills necessary for the practice of law
such as interviewing or counseling. For a more in depth explanation, see infra Part V.
20. The limitations of advanced legal research classes cannot support the changing
educational needs of first-year law students. See infra notes 98-102 and
accompanying text. In addition, the first-year program is where many commentators
and law schools have suggested change be addressed first. See, e.g., CARNEGIE
REPORT, supra note 3, at 3 ("Although our discussion ranges considerably beyond the
first-year experience, because that experience is so significant in shaping the whole of
legal education, it is our emphasis.").
21. See Kuh, supra note 15, at 224 (stating that law arises, evolves, is practiced, and is
applied in an electronic medium).
22. CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 7.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
goals.23 One of the major goals is to inculcate law students with the
legal knowledge and analytic skills necessary to pass the bar.24
However, this focus on teaching legal analysis and reasoning has led
to a longstanding belief that law schools fail miserably at another
important goal - producing law students capable of practicing law.25
This is often viewed as the difference between teaching the "legal
skills" necessary to "think like a lawyer" and "lawyering skills"
necessary for the practice of law.26 The American Bar Association
has identified ten fundamental lawyering skills essential for the
competent practice of law, only two of which, problem solving and
legal analysis, are directly linked to learning doctrine and analysis.27
While recognizing that these skill sets overlap, this Article adopts
this distinction between legal and lawyering skills by using the term
"legal skill" to denote the teaching and acquisition of doctrine and
legal reasoning abilities, and using the term "lawyering" or
"lawyering skills" to denote all other skills routinely used by
lawyers.28
Term "Lawyering," 101 LAW LIBR. J. 207, 215 (2009) (."Lawyering' is the work of a
specially skilled, knowledgeable, or experienced person who, serving by mutual
agreement as another person's agent, invokes and manipulates, or advises about, the
dispute-resolving or transaction-effectuating processes of the legal system for the
purpose of solving a problem or causing a desired change in, or preserving, the status
quo for his or her principal.").
29. Legal research generally covers the structure of the American legal system, primary
authorities (including the ability to read them correctly - understanding the difference
between dicta and holding, precatory language and statutory text) as well as the
concepts of jurisdiction and stare decisis. See MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at
152.
30. In analyzing the components of the skill of legal analysis and reasoning, the
MACCRATE REPORT specifically suggests that the skill of legal research will be
required for an attorney to identify and accurately formulate pertinent rules or
principles of law bearing on factual situations. Id.
31. A legal research course designed to carefully incorporate and reflect the material
students are studying in other classes supports the learning goals of those classes. See
infra Part V.A.
32. See supra note 30 and accompanying text.
33. MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at 135.
34. Id. at 136.
35. Id. at 163.
36. See BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 22.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
37. The CARNEGIE REPORT argues for a vision of "uniting, in a single educational
framework, the two sides of legal knowledge . . . formal knowledge and . . . the
experience of practice." Supra note 3, at 12.
38. See infra Part II.
39. See infra Part 11.
40. See infra Part Ill.
41. See infra Part IV.
42. See infra Part IV.
43. See infra Part V.
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
44. See Robert C. Berring, Collapse of the Structure of the Legal Research Universe: The
Imperative of Digital Information, 69 WASH. L. REV. 9, 12-13 (1994) [hereinafter
Berring, Legal Research Universe] (describing analysis of case law and the Socratic
method as the "twin roots of legal education and legal thinking").
45. See id.
46. See infra Part II.D (discussing the paradigm shift in American legal thought).
47. Berring, Legal Research Universe, supranote 44, at 33.
48. See infra Part II.A.
49. See infra notes 54-58 and accompanying text.
50. MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at xi, 3.
51. Id.
52. Id.at 135-36.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
63. See, e.g., CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 87-89; Joanne Martin & Bryant G.
Garth, Clinical Education as a Bridge Between Law School and Practice: Mitigating
the Misery, 1 CLINICAL L. REV. 443 (1994); Young & Blanco, supra note 7, at 107-
08.
64. James H. Backman, Practical Examples for Establishing an Externship Program
Available to Every Student, 14 CLINICAL L. REv. 1, 4-5 (2007) (discussing the growth
of extemships); Gerard J. Clark, Supervising Judicial Interns: A Primer, 36 SUFFOLK
U. L. REv. 681, 681 (2003) (noting the rise of internships in the past quarter century);
Robert MacCrate, Educating a Changing Profession: From Clinic to Continuum, 64
TENN. L. REv. 1099, 1129 (1997) (citing Task Force on Law Schools and the
Profession, Legal Education and Professional Development: An Educational
Continuum, 1992 A.B.A. SEC. LEGAL EDUC. AND ADMISSIONS TO THE BAR 6) (noting
that the growth of the clinic movement is one of the most significant developments in
legal education in the post-World War 11era).
65. See, e.g., CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 93-95.
66. See Young & Blanco, supra note 7, at 112-14. For purposes of the survey any off-
campus placement designed to allow students to gain basic practice skills was
considered an "externship." See id, at 106 n.2.
67. Id. at 113-14.
68. Id. at 113.
69. Id. at 115.
70. Id. at 116.
71. Supra note 60 and accompanying text.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
72. Rethinking Langdell: Historic Changes in IL Curriculum Set Stage for New Upper-
Level Programs of Study, HARV. L. TODAY, Dec. 13, 2006, http://www.law.
harvard.edu/news/today/dec hlt langdell.php [hereinafter Rethinking Langdell].
73. Id.; Leib, supra note 9, at 168 n.9 (listing schools that have moved to change their
curriculum to include or require administrative and statutory law courses).
74. Rethinking Langdell, supra note 72. Technological advances in storing, managing,
and accessing legal information are largely responsible for the environment that gave
rise to these changes. The legal community would not cite international and foreign
law were it not for its being easily accessible. See, e.g., Barger, supra note 11, at
422-28 (2002) (stating that ease of access supports increased citation to Internet
sources); Judge Cathy Cochran, Surfing the Web for a "Brandeis Brief': The Internet
and Judicial Use of Legislative Facts, 70 TEx. B.J. 780, 781 (2007) (stating that ease
of finding information on the Internet has increased citation to nonlegal sources
exponentially).
75. See Rethinking Langdell,supra note 72.
76. Judge Kristin Booth Glen suggests that both observers and practitioners of law realize
that, after contracts, administrative law is the most commonly encountered legal
subject in New York. Kristin Booth Glen, Thinking Out of the Bar Exam Box: A
Proposalto "MacCrate" Entry to the Profession, 23 PACE L. REv. 343, 360 (2003).
77. Edward P. Richards, Public Health Law as Administrative Law: Example Lessons, 10
J.HEALTH CARE L. & POL'Y 61, 61 (2007).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
84. See Margaret Martin Berry, Jon C. Dubin & Peter A. Joy, Clinical Educationfor this
Millennium: The Third Wave, 7 CLINICAL L. REV. 1, 57 (2000).
85. Claire M. Germain, Legal Information Management in a Global and Digital Age:
Revolution and Tradition, 35 INT'L J. LEGAL INFO. 134, 138 (2007). Germain defines
globalization as "the process of integrating nations and peoples-politically,
economically, and culturally-into a larger community." Id. at 137.
86. See, e.g., Steven G. Calabresi & Stephanie Dotson Zimdahl, The Supreme Court and
Foreign Sources of Law: Two Hundred Years of Practice and the Juvenile Death
Penalty Decision, 47 WM. & MARY L. REV. 743, 753 (2005) (finding that while the
Supreme Court's citation to foreign law is increasing, it is not unprecedented).
87. See Deborah Jones Merritt & Jennifer Cihon, New Course Offerings in the Upper-
Level Curriculum: Report of an AALS Survey, 47 J. LEGAL EDUC. 524, 537 tbl.2
(1997) (finding that the addition of international and comparative law courses
outpaced all other subjects).
88. See Rethinking Langdell, supra note 72 (stating that Harvard's new curriculum
requires students to select one of three courses addressing global legal systems); Toni
M. Fine, Reflections on U.S. Law Curricular Reform, 10 GERMAN L.J. 717, 736
(2009) (listing some of the American schools that offer first-year courses addressing
global aspects of law). In 2006 the Association of American Law Schools held a
workshop on Integration Transnational Legal Perspectives. AALS, Annual Meeting
Program, http://www.aals.org/am2006/program/transnational/index.html (last visited
Sept. 28, 2009).
89. See James P. White, A Look at Legal Education: The Globalization ofAmerican Legal
Education, 82 IND. L.J. 1285, 1287-89 (2007).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
96. For a discussion of how even relatively simple exercises in a class can lay the
foundation for important fundamentals that can be further explored in upper level
courses, see Charles R. Calleros, Introducing Students to Legislative Process and
Statutory Analysis Through ExperientialLearning in a FamiliarContext, 38 GONZ. L.
REv. 33, 41 (2002-2003).
97. See, e.g., Diamond, supra note 94, at 118-19 ("Remedying poor legal research habits,
cultivating advanced research skills, and coping with negative research conditions
require broader exposure throughout the law school curriculum than stand-alone
advanced legal research courses can provide.").
98. See Silecchia, supra note 83, at 210-11 (explaining that advanced research training is
needed because many of the necessary skills are not covered in the first year).
99. See Young & Blanco, supra note 7, at 111.
100. Ian Gallacher, Forty-Two: The Hitchhiker'sGuide to Teaching Legal Research to the
Google Generation, 39 AKRON L. REV. 151, 171 (2006).
101. Young & Blanco, supra note 7, at 111-12.
102. [A] more basic concern is that the student is sent into the legal
community as a representative of the law school. A student who
is not adequately prepared to enter the professional law office or
judicial chambers risks making mistakes that could be
embarrassing to her and also to the school. While a well prepared
extern could pave the way for many more successful placements,
a student who disappoints a field supervisor could harm the
prospects for future student placements from the same institution.
Id; see also Gallacher, supra note 100, at 171 ("Students not only represent
themselves when they seek summer work, they represent their law schools as well. It
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
also true; students with solid legal research skills will be more
confident, have more time to focus on the legal analysis and writing
aspects of their assignments, and will reflect positively on their law
school.
Further, advanced legal research classes are rarely mandatory and
enrollment is often severely limited.1"3 This forces clinics and
externship placement programs to teach entirely new research skills
rather than merely assisting students to review material covered in
their first-year research classes."°' Thus, valuable educational time in
which students could be introduced to those lawyering skills not
taught at all in the first-year curriculum is wasted on material that
should have already been taught. It also means students who do not
participate in a clinic or externship, or do not take advanced legal
research classes, will graduate lacking adequate understanding of
regulatory research or even cursory knowledge of nonlegal research
or the structures of legal institutions outside the United States.
C. Researching in a TechnologicalEnvironment
Deficient regulatory research skills, a complete lack of information
about international legal research, and ignorance of nonlegal research
are not the only hurdles first-year law students must overcome.
Layered onto and intertwined with these challenges are the added
affects of the explosion of easily accessible information in free and
fee-based Internet databases.0 5 The amount of retrievable
information-both useful and worthless-can overwhelm the most
determined legal researcher. To complicate matters further, students
face a bewildering and growing choice of tools with which to retrieve
and manage these staggering amounts of information, and there is no
is a legal research program's responsibility to ensure that both student and school are
seen in the best possible light and that, in turn, mandates that legal research be taken
seriously in the first year of law school.").
103. Ann Hemmens, Advanced Legal Research Courses:A Survey of ABA -Accredited Law
Schools, 94 LAW LIBR. J. 209, 223 (2002) (explaining that three-quarters of those
responding limited the class to twenty students or less).
104. See, e.g., Diamond, supra note 94, at 68-70 (noting that most legal research classes
do not teach practitioner research skills and arguing that advanced legal research
courses should be interconnected with clinics). As suggested by Calleros, even small
discussions of fundamental concepts can pave the way for more in-depth learning
later in law school. See Calleros, supra note 96, at 41. However if material is entirely
and completely new, students have a much harder time learning it, especially given
the time constraints of a summer placement.
105. Paul Beneke, Brutal Choices in CurricularDesign, Give Students Full CALR Access
Immediately, 8 No. 3 PERSP. TEACHING LEGAL RES. & WRITING 114 (2000).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
Third, students are convinced their nonlegal research skills will easily
translate into legal research success and they are impatient with
anything other than systems such as Westlaw and Lexis once in law
school." 4 All of this culminates in a belief that they are successful
with electronic
5
researching even when confronted with proof to the
contrary. "
Additionally, but less obviously, the rise of the Internet, the shift to
CALR, and the almost complete automation of the law have more far
reaching consequences. This confluence has the potential to
undermine legal education. Law schools still teach legal analysis
using the principles and methods developed in the 19th century," 6
which reflect and depend on "the law" as stable, built on precedent,17
and with a knowable, discernable, and well-understood structure."
However, this legal structure is being eroded by the tide of
technology that is embraced by this generation of law students." 8
D. Legal Reasoning in a TechnologicalEnvironment
American law, and more importantly, American legal education
has historically been set within what Professor Robert Berring calls
research skills and arguing that law schools must address student information
illiteracy); Cathaleen A. Roach, Is the Sky Falling?Ruminations on Incoming Law
Student Preparedness (and Implications for the Profession) in the Wake of Recent
National and Other Reports, 11 LEGAL WRITING J. LEGAL WRITING INST. 295, 296
(2005) (referencing an unpublished AALL survey that indicates that even law students
at top law schools arrive with inadequate basic research skills).
114. Berring, Thinkable Thoughts, supra note 13, at 313 (describing computer savvy
students as being impatient with resources other than electronic resources).
115. Lee F. Peoples, The Death of the Digest and the Pitfallsof Electronic Research: What
Is the Modern Legal Researcher to Do?, 97 LAw LIBR. J. 661, 676 (2005) (finding
that students were "unflappable" in their belief that terms and connectors searching in
Westlaw and Lexis Nexis was the most effective form of research even when
confronted with evidence to the contrary).
116. See Jason M. Dolin, Opportunity Lost: How Law School DisappointsLaw Students,
the Public, and the Legal Profession, 44 CAL. W. L. REV. 219, 222 (2007) (noting that
law schools continue to use methods and casebooks that replicate Langdell's
methods); Kate O'Neill, But Who Will Teach Legal Reasoning and Synthesis?, 4 J.
ASS'N LEGAL WRITING DIRECTORS 21, 23 (2007) (stating that explicit instruction in
legal reasoning shifts to the "skills" portion of first-year curriculums).
117. See Curtis E. Harris, An Undue Burden: Balancing in an Age of Relativism, 18 OKLA.
CITY U. L. REV. 363, 375 (1993).
118. See Robert C. Berring, Legal Research and Legal Concepts: Where Form Molds
Substance, 75 CAL. L. REV. 15 (1987); Nazareth A.M. Pantaloni III, Legal Databases,
Legal Epistemology,and the Legal Order, 86 LAw LIBR. J. 679, 680 (1994).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
129. See Laura I Appleman, The Rise of the Modern American Law School: How
Professionalization,German Scholarship, and Legal Reform Shaped Our System of
Legal Education, 39 NEw ENG. L. REV. 251, 285 (2005).
130. Id. at 286-87.
131. For example, as noted professor and Dean of Harvard Law School, Roscoe Pound
said, "it is well to bear in mind that the teacher is not (or ought not to be) teaching
classification. He is teaching law, and he uses that classification which will enable
him to teach law most effectively." Roscoe Pound, Classification of Law, 37 HARV.
L. REV. 933, 940 (1924); see also Thomas C. Grey, Langdell's Orthodoxy, 45 U. Purr.
L. REV. 1, 47 (1983) ("For the critics, conceptual ordering was not, as in classical
orthodoxy, a form of scientific discovery, but rather a pragmatic enterprise, to be
judged by its success in achieving its practical ends. . . . Its main importance,
however, is pedagogic: a newcomer to the law needs an overview of its main
doctrines, stated in oversimplified but readily comprehensible form.").
132. Kuh, supra note 15, at 236.
133. ld; Fritz Snyder, The West Digest System: The Ninth Circuit and the Montana
Supreme Court, 60 MONT. L. REV. 541, 544 (1999).
134. Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic, Why Do We Tell the Same Stories?: Law Reform,
Critical Librarianship,and the Triple Helix Dilemma, 42 STAN. L. REV. 207, 215
(1989).
135. Hanson, supra note 122, at 570-71 (stating that lawyers trained in the Langdellian
approach to law and immersed in the West digest system during legal research came
to mistake the classification systems for the intrinsic structure of the law).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
136. Barbara Bintliff, From Creativity to Computerese: Thinking Like a Lawyer in the
Computer Age, 88 LAW LIBR. J. 338, 343 (1996); see also Robert C. Berring, Full-
Text Databases and Legal Research: Backing into the Future, 1 HIGH TECH. L.J. 27,
54 (1986) [hereinafter Berring, Backing into the Future] (explaining that the West
digest system was an "internal, mediating structure within the old mode of
discourse").
137. See generally William R. Mills, The Decline and Fall of the Dominant Paradigm:
Trustworthinessof Case Reports in the DigitalAge, 53 N.Y.L. SCH. L. REv. 917, 919,
922 (2008-2009) (suggesting that the demise of the West paradigm for organizing the
law resulted in large part from the rise of computerized legal research).
138. Id. at93 1-32.
139. Professor Kuh states that "finding the raw materials of law through the legal research
process drives the legal enterprise and the development of the law, informing and
shaping the arguments and decisions that attorneys make as advisers, gatekeepers,
adversaries, and judges." Kuh, supra note 15, at 226. Kuh delineates a series of
changes in the law occurring as a direct result of the shift to an electronic medium for
researching the law. Id.; see also Ethan Katsh, Law in a Digital World: Computer
Networks and Cyberspace, 38 VILL. L. REv. 403, 442-43 (1993) (stating that new
forms of access to information allow users to do things differently than before, which
leads to changes in values and institutions built on obsolete technologies).
140. Bast & Pyle, supra note 15, at 285 (article entitled Legal Research in the Computer
Age: A Paradigm Shift?); Berring, Backing into the Future, supra note 136, at 38
(calling the advent of Lexis Nexis and Westlaw the "new paradigm"); see also Peter
Alldridge & Ann Mumford, Gazing into the Future Through a VDU:
Communications, Information Technology, and Law Teaching, 25 J. LAW & Soc'Y
116, 121-26 (1998) (discussing the effect computers and information technology will
have on the jurisprudential paradigms underpinning legal education).
141. Berring, Cognitive Authority, supra note 15, at 1679, 1691. Berring calls this "The
Long, Stable Century" when legal research was dominated by case law and the West
digest system. Id. at 1691-92, 1694. He dates its end in the 1990s with the "[t]hree
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
spikes" of a changing user environment, corporate consolidation, and the Internet. Id.
at 1696.
142. See, e.g., Bast & Pyle, supra note 15, at 285; Hanson, supra note 122, at 563; Kuh,
supra note 15, at 224, 226.
143. Hanson, supra note 122, at 580 (stating that automated research is more likely to turn
up novel cases considered as precedent than use of West digest system); Berring,
Legal Research Universe, supra note 44, at 28 (arguing that with the rise of CALR
and automated information storage and retrieval, "[w]hatever linear nature precedent
could once claim is now gone"); Bernard E. Jacob, Ancient Rhetoric, Modern Legal
Thought, and Politics:A Review Essay on the Translation of Viehweg's "Topics and
Law," 89 Nw. U. L. REv. 1622, 1674 (1995), stating:
A precedent system turns out to be sensitive to volume and bulk;
in most forms of private law adjudication, even in fields such as
tax and securities law where a certain elitist formalism has tended
to prevail, the possibility of using precedents effectively seems to
have been swamped by the number of cases, the number and
varieties of jurisdictions handing out judgments, and the
information technologies that are ever more efficient in giving us
(all too) adequate access to these materials.
144. Edith H. Jones, Back to the Future for Federal Appeals Courts: Rationing Federal
Justice by Recovering Limited Jurisdiction, 73 TEx. L. REV. 1485, 1495 (1995).
Judge Jones of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, pointed to
increased judicial discretion and decreased predictability of legal outcomes as the
primary result of publishing more cases. Id. While Jones' insights were in the
context of caseloads and unpublished opinions, her point is applicable no matter what
the cause of the increase in accessibility to cases and legal information. The more
cases that can be found (and more are found using technology) the greater the impact
those cases have on the process of weakening the structure of precedent.
145. Berring, Legal Research Universe, supra note 44, at 29.
146. Schauer & Wise, supra note 91, at 497 (defining delegalization as the increase in
reliance on nonlegal information in court decisions and arguing that it has profound
implications for how law is understood); see also John J. Hasko, Persuasion in the
Court: Nonlegal Materials in US. Supreme Court Opinions, 94 LAw L13R. J. 427
(2002) (noting the growing tendency of courts to rely on nonlegal material in legal
reasoning and problem solving).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
147. Hanson, supra note 122, at 584. This "relaxation" is due in part to the growth in
access to secondary sources. Id.
148. Id.at 588 (citing Richard A. Posner, The Decline of Law as an Autonomous
Discipline: 1962-1987, 100 HARV. L. REV. 761, 769 (1937)).
149. Frederick Schauer, Authority and Authorities, 94 VA.L. REv. 1931, 1960 (2008).
150. See Kuh, supra note 15, at 236 (linking the changes created by the advent of
electronic legal research to recent moves away from traditional Langdellian legal
education).
151. See Bintliff, supra note 136, at 339 (moving from a rule or concept-based system to a
fact-based system); Hanson, supra note 122, at 583 (suggesting a reorientation of the
organization of law from that of general principles to surface level factual
similarities).
152. Word searching is often called "key word" searching. Unfortunately, all too often the
words chosen are not "key," but merely those suggested by the facts. Word searching,
by its very nature, increases the likelihood that researchers will search for facts rather
than general legal principles. Facts are much easier to search for than vague or
complex concepts and rules, which can be written a number of ways or merely
implied by a court. That automation increases the likelihood of fact-based searches
has been discussed at length. See Berring, Backing into the Future,supra note 136, at
48 (discussing a study on full text searching and contrasting the difficulty of matching
words to ideas and matching words to specific factual situations); Bintliff, supra note
136, at 348 (searching for concepts returns too many cases, which leads searchers to
avoid those searches and look for facts); Delgado & Stefancic, supra note 134, at 221
(1989) (CALR excells at finding facts, but is less useful in finding cases that illustrate
or discuss more complex or abstract concepts). This is not meant to suggest that one
cannot find rules or general legal principles with word searches. See Peoples, supra
note 115, at 674-75 (indicating that students can be successful at finding legal rules
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
framework of the law and allows her to become the sole arbiter of
how the law should be structured.' 53 Word searching, regardless of
whether it is done to find facts or general principles, "conveys a
sense of the law's organization as shallow and loose," which inhibits
the searcher's impetus to seek out overarching legal principles within
which to base legal arguments.'54 A law student being trained to
think within the structures created by Langdell and West but who
locates, accesses, and manipulates law using electronic means,
cannot help but be confused and disconcerted by the disconnect
between the two modes of thinking.
Along with changing how we research law, CALR changes what
we find, which also has far reaching consequences. For example,
researchers using electronic systems to find case law locate both
more and different cases than they do using print sources.155
According to Professor Kuh this leads to the articulation of a larger
variety of legal theories and arguments, which in turn will lead to the
advancement of "marginal cases, theories, and arguments" by
careless attorneys.' 56 She argues that electronic research exacerbates
the inherent tendency for a researcher to seek out information
supportive of a legal assumption, and to avoid or dismiss information
that challenges that assumption.'57 This also increases the chance that
a researcher will rely on moribund cases, incorrectly distinguish
cases, and be less able to recognize faults in cases or legal theories
located during research.' 58
with electronic searches), only that the system itself increases the likelihood that fact-
based searches will predominate.
153. See Berring, Backing into the Future, supra note 136, at 54-55 (arguing that free text
searching "deprives the researcher of context," and that information is presented in an
arbitrary fashion, both of which weaken the structure of the law); Bintliff, supra note
136, at 345 ("When we use computers as our primary research tool, we neither start
with, nor reliably retrieve, a coherent statement of applicable rules. We don't have a
framework to which to refer, as we do with a digest.").
154. Hanson, supra note 122, at 584.
155. See Kuh, supra note 15, at 247-49. This is due not only to the massive amount of
documents available in electronic databases but also because of the ability to follow
links from one case or document to another, thus retrieving material that did not
appear in the initial search. Id.
156. Id. at 261. Kuh argues that cognitive behavior principles including "Confirmatory
Bias" and "Selective Information Processing" affect our use of computerized
information. Id. at 254.
157. Id. (basing her arguments on studies of cognitive behavioral theory).
158. Id. at 262-65. This is one of the most important reasons for teaching legal research as
an iterative process of problem solving. See infra section V.B.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
159. Lien, supra note 15, at 89. This is not unlike the "'threat of the available"' which is
the tendency in thinking and study to turn to the most available material and to use
that material exclusively. See Richard A. Danner, Contemporary and Future
Directions in American Legal Research: Responding to the Threat of the Available,
31 INT'L J. LEGAL INFO. 179, 182 (2003) (quoting Karl N. Llewellyn, Legal Tradition
and Social Science Method--A Realist's Critique, in ESSAYS ON RESEARCH IN THE
SOCIAL SCIENCES 89, 95-96 (1931)).
160. Bintliff, supra note 136, at 348 (quoting CLIFFORD STOLL, SILICON SNAKE OIL:
SECOND THOUGHTS ON THE INFORMATION HIGHWAY 134 (1995)).
161. Id.
162. Katsh, supra note 139, at 406.
163. Berring, Backing into the Future,supra note 136, at 56.
164. Several authors suggest that CALR, with its huge databases of legal information and
highly customized searching, facilitates an ability to craft arguments to appeal to
judicial bias. See id.; Hanson, supra note 122, at 580-81.
165. See Bintliff, supra note 136, at 339.
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
166. See Robert C. Berring, A Sort of Response: Brutal Non-Choices, 4 No. 3 PERSP.
TEACHING LEGAL RES. & WRITING 81, 81 (1996) [hereinafter Bering, Brutal Non-
Choices] (noting that well-taught legal research classes do not exist at most schools).
167. Called the "bibliographic method," this type of teaching often involves the student in
"treasure hunts" designed to familiarize students with the law library and legal
resources. See James B. Levy, Better Research Instruction Through "Point ofNeed"
Library Exercises, 7 LEGAL WRITING J. LEGAL WRITING INST. 87, 94 (2001). This
method can be used in a stand-alone class or in a discrete series of lectures within a
legal research and writing class. See id.
168. Often called the "'process-orientated' approach," this introduces students to the legal
sources necessary to complete the writing assignment. Id. While the process
approach is usually seen as superior because it places legal research into context, it
also has major drawbacks, not the least of which are the limited amount of legal
sources covered, the incomplete use of the legal sources covered, and the failure to
teach legal research strategy. Id. at 95-96.
169. See Lisa Eichhom, The Legal Writing Relay: PreparingSupervising Attorneys to Pick
up the PedagogicalBaton, 5 LEGAL WRITING J. LEGAL WRITING INST. 143, 145-46
(1999).
170. See id. at 147-48. Eichhorn argues a variety of factors, including professorial rank,
status, teaching loads, and credit allotment, send messages to students. She concludes
that "when time is scarce, as it always is in law school, students will spend their
precious hours on courses that appear to be more important and give short shrift to
those that the law school does not seem to have invested in." Id. at 148.
171. See infra notes 228-36 and accompanying text (describing the individual skills
required to research effectively).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
172. Michael J.Lynch, An Impossible Task but Everybody Has to Do It-Teaching Legal
Research in Law School, 89 LAW LIBR. J. 415, 437 (1997) ("Legal Research and
Writing courses offered on a pass-fail basis ensure that student incentives will be
limited."); see also Charles B. Craver, The Impact of a Pass/Fail Option on
Negotiation Course Performance, 48 J. LEGAL EDUC. 176, 185 (1998) ("[T]here is a
statistically and practically significant difference between the graded students'
performance on the negotiation exercises and that of pass/fail students.").
173. Leigh Hunt Greenhaw, "To Say What the Law Is": Learning the Practice of Legal
Rhetoric, 29 VAL. U. L. REV. 861, 864-65 (1994-1995) ("The historical reason for
neglect of research and writing in legal education appears to have been economic,
rather than theoretical or pedagogical.").
174. [T]eaching legal research is not easy. Many librarians have no
idea how to do it well, many legal writing instructors do not know
how to do it well. The kind of cutting-edge programs emerging at
places like Harvard under the guidance of Virginia Wise, the type
of work that goes on in advanced legal research courses around
the country, these are labors of creativity. There is more to good
research than bibliography, just as there is more to good writing
than grammar. These are complex areas. There are precious few
folks who are masters of one of these crafts, let alone both. It
demeans research to consign its teaching to those who do not
spend their lives on it.
Berring, BrutalNon-Choices, supra note 166, at 81.
175. Id. Further, although law librarians at most law schools are required to have both a
Masters degree in Library and Information Science and a J.D., non-librarians who
teach legal research within a legal writing course are not required to have advanced
legal research training. Cf Duncan Alford, The Development of the Skills Curriculum
in Law Schools: Lessons for Directors of Academic Law Libraries, 28:3 LEGAL
REFERENCE SERV. Q. 301, 306-09, 311 (2009) (stating that writing experts are
infrequently research experts).
176. Alford, supra note 175, at 311 (noting that research instruction has been, in most law
schools, declared a component of the legal writing curriculum); Berring, Brutal Non-
Choices, supra note 166, at 81 (arguing that a major difficulty in creating good
research programs is lack of faculty support); Lynch, supra note 172, at 431 (stating
that when writing instructors control the syllabus, time devoted to legal research
sources inevitably declines); Roy M. Mersky, Legal Research Versus Legal Writing
Within the Law School Curriculum, 99 LAW LIBR. J. 395, 399 (2007) ("1 have long
argued that increased attention to legal writing has come at the cost of legal research
instruction.").
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
177. David S. Romantz, The Truth About Cats and Dogs: Legal Writing Courses and the
Law School Curriculum, 52 U. KAN. L. REv. 105, 124 (2003). Although Romantz
subsumes research into legal research and writing courses (as do many writers), his
thesis is equally applicable to legal research courses. He suggests that although the
pedagogical approaches between doctrinal courses and writing courses differ, they
should be seen to complement each other, both training students to think critically
about the law and to solve legal problems. Id. at 137.
178. See Gerald F. Hess, Heads and Hearts: The Teaching and Learning Environment in
Law School, 52 J. LEGAL EDUC. 75, 104-05 (2002) (noting that good teaching not
only requires subject matter expertise, but also requires a passion for the subject and
recognition of its importance). Herbert Cihak provides a telling anecdote related by
U.C. Berkley Librarian and Professor of Law Robert Berring, who was interviewing
the school's head of the research and writing program. When Berring asked him how
he wanted to handle the research portion of the course, the man looked at Berring and
said, ""'Research, Wow, I don't know. I hadn't thought about that. Is that something
the library does or something?'.... Herbert E. Cihak, Teaching Legal Research: A
ProactiveApproach, 19 LEGAL REFER. SERV. Q. 27, 36 n.7 (2001).
179. Gordon A. MacLeod, Creative Problem-Solvingfor Lawyers?!, 16 J. LEGAL EDUC.
198 (1963-1964) (suggesting that law schools must teach the ability to "Resolve
Legal Problems Effectively and Responsibly," as problem solving is "'the' skill of
lawyering."); see also BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 59 n.45.
180. David Nadvorney, Teaching Legal Reasoning Skills in Substantive Courses: A
PracticalView, 5 N.Y. CITY L. REV. 109, 110 (2002).
181. See Ellie Margolis & Susan L. DeJarnatt, Moving Beyond Product to Process:
Building a Better LR WProgram, 46 SANTA CLARA L. REv. 93, 112-13 (2005).
182. CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 4 (describing professional schools as where expert
knowledge and judgment and professional values are on display and where future
practitioners can examine future identities and roles).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
183. Peter Brandon Bayer, A Pleafor Rationality and Decency: The DisparateTreatment
of Legal Writing Faculties as a Violation of Both Equal Protectionand Professional
Ethics, 39 DuQ. L. REv. 329, 378 (2001).
184. See Margolis & DeJamatt, supra note 181, at 109-14.
185. See id. at 111-13.
186. Christopher G.Wren & Jill Robinson Wren, The Teaching of Legal Research, 80 LAW
LIBR. J.7,19-20 (1988).
187. Margolis & DeJarnett, supra note 181, at 112 & n.85.
188. See Helene S. Shapo & Christina L. Kunz, Brutal Choices in CurricularDesign:
Teaching Research as Part of an Integrated LR&W Course, 4 PERSP: TEACHING
LEGAL RES. & WRITING 78 (1996).
189. See supra note 168 and accompanying text.
190. See Levy, supra note 167, at 95-97; Margolis & DeJarnatt, supra note 181, at 109-
116; see also Shapo & Kunz, supra note 188 (describing integrated research and
writing classes). It must be noted that many of those who have been around the legal
academy for extended periods feel that most integrated research and writing programs
give short shrift to research. See Berring, Brutal Non-Choices, supra note 166;
Mersky, supra note 176.
191. See Berring, Brutal Non-Choices, supra note 166; Dunn, supra note 59, at 56;
Mersky, supra note 176; Helene S. Shapo, The Frontiers of Legal Writing:
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
legal research. These will be the students to whom clinics and extern
programs must teach legal research, the students who fair poorly at
their summer employment, and those who cannot research upon
graduation.
A. Legal Research is Fundamentalto Learning andPracticingLaw
As commentary to the ABA Model Rules of Professional Conduct
suggests, "the most fundamental legal skill consists of determining
what kind of legal problems a situation may involve, a skill that
necessarily transcends any particular specialized knowledge. '215 The
comment further states that a "lawyer can provide adequate 216
representation in a wholly novel field through necessary study.
Legal research is the legal skill that directly links the ability to
determine legal issues and represent clients with the ability to achieve
that "necessary study., 217 This is not a unique revelation. The
Carnegie Report described legal research as one of the skills that
"define[s] effective lawyering., 218 Best Practices for Legal Education
argues that legal research is one of the necessary professional skills
that law schools must teach if law graduates are to perform
effectively as lawyers.219 The American Bar Association
accreditation standards require that students receive substantial
instruction in legal research. 220 The National Conference of Bar
Examiners is considering adding a legal research component to the
bar exam, 22 ' and legal research was also one of the twelve skills rated
as "essential" or very important in a 2005 Arizona Bench and Bar
Association survey.222 In 1992, the MacCrate Report listed legal
research as one of ten fundamental lawyering skills. 223 In addition,
legal information specialists have long recognized the importance of
224. See Berring, Legal Research Universe, supra note 44, at 25-27. Berring describes a
legal research course and textbook developed by Professor Rombauer at the
University of Washington School of Law in the early 1970s. He explains that she saw
first-year legal research as fully integrated and linked directly to legal analysis and
thought. He then goes on to explain that teaching it in this manner failed in part
because it did not fit within the Langdellian teaching format, because it was seen as
too clinical, and because regular law faculty did not have the skills to teach it. Id. at
25-26.
225. MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at 138.
226. Id. at 163.
227. Id.
228. See Gallacher, supra note 100, at 158 ("[T]he legal research process is where law
students first experience the framing of a legal issue from a given set of facts and then
the exploring of legal doctrine within the factual context of the given problem.");
Debra S. Enimelman, Gauging the Strength of Evidence Prior to Plea Bargaining:
The Interpretive Procedures of Court-Appointed Defense Attorneys, 22 LAW & SOC.
INQUIRY 927, 939 (1997) (indicating that legal research is based on "' issue
spotting').
229. Theodore A. Potter, A New Twist on an Old Plot: Legal Research Is a Strategy, Not a
Format, 92 LAW LIBR. J. 287, 290 (2000) (focus in legal research teaching should be
on "good research strategy").
230. Researching primary legal authority is included in all basic legal research texts. See,
e.g., CRISTINA L. KUNZ ET AL., THE PROCESS OF LEGAL RESEARCH xiii-xv (6th ed.
2004) (individual chapters on case law, statutes, and regulations).
231. See Barbara Bintliff, Context and Legal Research, 99 LAW LIBR. J. 249, 258 (2007)
("Effective legal research starts within a sophisticated context of background
information and knowledge. Considerable analysis and experience are required to
understand the meaning and relative importance of authorities, and then to use them to
craft a persuasive argument.").
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
232. Romantz, supra note 177, at 139-40 n.203 (legal research involves important
jurisprudential doctrines such as precedent, stare decisis, and the common law).
233. Kris Franklin, ".... See Erie.": CriticalStudy of Legal Authority, 31 U. ARK. LITTLE
ROCK L. REv. 109, 130 n.59 (2008) (discussing the importance of citation being
taught in "legal research/writing/analysis" courses).
234. See Gallacher, supra note 100, at 158; Teitcher, supra note 83, at 565 ("Teaching
legal research necessarily involves teaching synthesis and legal analysis .... ").
235. See, e.g., KUNZ ET AL., supra note 230, at 58-60 (containing an entire section on how
to determine when to stop researching).
236. Seeid at21.
237. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 27-29; MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at
135-37.
238. See BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 94-100.
239. For a description of the difference between "legal skill" and "lawyering skill," see
supra notes 28-36 and accompanying text.
240. See infra notes 257-58 and accompanying text.
2010] Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
schools. 24' "Thinking like a lawyer" has been defined both broadly
as encompassing many of the skill sets used by practicing
attorneys, 242 and narrowly as centered on analytic skills. 243 However
one defines "thinking like a lawyer," most educators understand that
it is necessary to immerse first-year law students in the law and in
legal analysis to succeed. 2' Teaching legal research as a legal skill
provides both the basic legal knowledge necessary to "think like a
lawyer" and reinforces and helps to immerse first-year law students
into the cognitive apprenticeship necessary to succeed in law
school.245
The individual components of legal research involve both
analytical and lawyering skills. 24 6 First, the analytic study of
American law is inextricably linked with legal research.24" In
addition, successful legal research requires, and legal research classes
241. See David T. ButleRitchie, Situating "Thinking Like a Lawyer" Within Legal
Pedagogy,50 CLEV. ST. L. REV. 29, 34 (2002-2003).
242. See id. at 30 (citing James Elkins, Carrie Menkle-Meadow, and Nancy Schultz as
legal educators who have argued for broadening the scope of what constitutes
"thinking like a lawyer") (citations omitted).
243. See, e.g., id. at 30-31 (arguing that a narrow interpretation of the skills needed to
"think like a lawyer" better serves law schools in the context of introducing entering
law students to legal reasoning skills); Kurt M. Saunders & Linda Levine, Learning to
Think Like a Lawyer, 29 U.S.F. L. REV. 121, 125 (1994) (noting that analytical skills
are thought to be more closely tied to the lawyer's cognitive processes, and are thus
more frequently viewed as the components of thinking like a lawyer).
244. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 27 (using the concept of apprenticeship to
describe a law student's move from novice to professional); BEST PRACTICES, supra
note 4, at 94-100 (stating that law schools need to coordinate instruction and integrate
theory, doctrine, and practice); Saunders & Levine, supra note 243, at 180-86
(remarking that the process of learning to think like a lawyer is iterative and
evolutionary throughout the first year); David T. ButleRitchie, supra note 241, at 32-
33 (describing the first year as an initiation into thinking like a lawyer).
245. Gallacher, supra note 100, at 158 ("Reduced to its essence, the legal research process
is where law students first experience the framing of a legal issue from a given set of
facts and then the exploring of legal doctrine within the factual context of the given
problem. In effect, legal research is where law students first begin to think of the law
in a problem-solving light and where, in true Kingsfieldian terms, they begin to think
like lawyers.").
246. See supra notes 228-36 and accompanying text (detailing individual components of
legal research); Michael Coper, Legal Knowledge, The Responsibility of Lawyers, and
the Task of Law Schools, 39 U. TOL. L. REV. 251, 255 (2008) (an article written by an
Australian Dean and Law Professor describing legal research as one of two skills that
"underpin or overarch" the categories of knowledge and skills in law schools).
247. See supra notes 119-24 and accompanying text (discussing the deep connection
between legal thought and the creation and use of early legal classification systems).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
teach, the basic knowledge necessary for the study of law.248 These
include the structure of the American system of government, the
structure of the court system, the multiple concepts of jurisdiction,
the concepts of precedent and stare decisis, the different sources of
primary authority and how to read and track them, and how these
primary authorities affect one another.24 9 These topics are necessary
for case law synthesis25 ° and are referenced but often not taught in-
depth elsewhere in the curriculum.
Further, legal research is an iterative process of problem solving
requiring legal reasoning and analysis. 51 It would be impossible to
do legal research without analyzing, synthesizing, and applying the
information found, both to the original issue and to the research plan
developed to address the issue.252 The process of legal research
requires an ability to determine legal context, 253 assess the law found
248. See MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, § 3.1, at 157 (suggesting that legal research
requires knowledge of the nature of legal rules and institutions).
249. See id.
250. For example, before a student can identify and combine relevant authority into an
analytic framework she must understand the nature and hierarchy of authority in the
American legal system. See Jane Kent Gionfriddo, Thinking Like a Lawyer: The
Heuristics of Case Synthesis, 40 TEX. TECH L. REV. 1, 4 (2007).
251. See, e.g., The MACCRATE REPORT supra note 27, at 152 (specifically linking legal
research with legal analysis and reasoning); Callister, supranote 211, at 31-32, 48-49
(discussing the use of schemata to teach the complex problem-solving skills necessary
for legal research); Larry 0. Natt Gantt, II, Deconstructing Thinking Like a Lawyer:
Analyzing the Cognitive Components of the Analytical Mind, 29 CAMPBELL L. REV.
413, 422 (2007) (the practical skill of legal research necessarily involves analytical
skills like statutory or case synthesis and analysis); Spencer L. Simons, Navigating
Through the Fog: Teaching Legal Research and Writing Students to Master
Indeterminacy Through Structure and Process, 56 J. LEGAL EDUC. 356, 357 (2006)
("[T]he purpose of research is to reveal the possible range of theories that may be
applied to the problems presented, to assess the probabilities of the outcomes that may
result if the issue is adjudicated, and to inform the strategy for influencing the result
of any adjudications, either in the structuring of transactions or in presenting the case
to adjudicators."); Charles J. Ten Brink, A JurisprudentialApproach to Teaching
Legal Research, 39 NEW ENG. L. REv. 307, 316 (2005) ("[L]egal research is not an
endeavor distinct from the process of legal reasoning and argument."); The Boulder
Statement on Legal Research Education (June 21-22, 2009) (on file with author)
(discussing legal research as the resolution of legal problems through an iterative and
analytical process).
252. See MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at 152.
253. Thomas Keefe, Finding Haystacks: Context in Legal Research, 93 ILL. B.J. 484, 484
(2005) (suggesting that one of the first steps in the process of legal research is to
identify what the answer might look like and where one might find it-to create
context).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
254. Thomas R. French, Minding the Gap: 21st Century International, Foreign and
ComparativeLaw Research Issues, 35 SYRACUSE J. INT'L L. & CoM. 159, 159 (2008)
("Locating and accessing relevant statutes, opinions, regulations, treaties, treatises and
documents is fundamental to legal research.").
255. Bintliff, supra note 136, at 3,40-41.
256. See, e.g., Amy E. Sloan, Erasing Lines: Integratingthe Law School Curriculum, 1 J.
ASS'N LEGAL WRITING DIRECTORS 3, 6-7 (2002) (describing how students can learn
substantive rules and doctrine through the legal research process).
257. See Franklin, supra note 233, at 111; accord Schauer, supra note 149, at 1934
(describing citation practice as "the surface manifestation of a deeply important facet
of the nature of law itself').
258. Franklin, supra note 233, at 111-12.
259. When done poorly, as when lawyers overly rely on CALR and key word searching, it
actually stultifies creativity and reduces the likelihood of solutions to new or unique
legal problems. See generally Richard Delgado & Jean Stefancic, Why Do We Ask the
Same Questions? The Triple Helix Dilemma Revisited, 99 LAw LIBR. J. 307 (2007)
(discussing the limitations of CALR, especially in law reform cases).
260. CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 58.
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
261. Multiple studies of practitioners indicate the fundamental nature of legal research as a
lawyering skill. See, e.g., BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 78 (discussing a survey
which indicated that 94% of the Arizona Bar considered legal research as essential or
very important); MACCRAm REPORT, supra note 27, at 123-26 (detailing the process
by which the writers determined which legal skills to include); see also W. Sherman
Rogers, Title VII Preemption of State Bar Examinations:Applicability of Title VII to
State OccupationalLicensing Tests, 32 How. L.J. 563, 589-90 & nn.150-54 (1989)
(noting surveys listing legal research as a fundamental skill).
262. CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 101 (listing legal research along with developing
evidence, interviewing, client counseling, drafting documents, and negotiating).
263. MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, at 163.
264. See Marguerite L. Butler, Rule 11-Sanctions and a Lawyer's Failure to Conduct
Competent Legal Research, 29 CAP. U. L. REv. 681, 694-97 (2002) (documenting the
types of sanctions ordered for poor legal research by attorneys); Ellie Margolis,
Surfin' Safari: Why Competent Lawyers Should Research on the Web, 10 YALE J. L.
& TECH. 82, 89-106 (2007) (discussing court sanctions as well as ethics violations
and malpractice claims because of poor legal research).
265. MacLachlan, supra note 95, at 616.
266. MACCRATE REPORT, supra note 27, § 6.2(b), at 178.
267. Id. § 7.1(b)(i), at 185.
268. Id.§ 8.1(a)(vi), at 191; § 8.1(c)(i)(A)(II), at 192; § 8.1(c)(B), at 193; § 8.3(d)(ii), at
196.
269. See id.at 172 (indicating that lawyers must gain substantive knowledge of other
fields).
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
research is the conduit for the "necessary study" that allows attorneys
to competently represent clients."'
Lawyers can neither learn nor practice law without the ability to
perform legal research.2 72 Law schools should re-engineer their legal
research programs to reflect the fundamental nature of legal research.
Doing so will provide students with the tools and education they need
to address the storm of information currently altering the legal
landscape. Refusing to recognize and address the changes in the
legal environment will leave students confused and helpless against
the tide of information currently swamping the law.
V. PRINCIPLES FOR REBUILDING LEGAL RESEARCH
EDUCATION
Once law students, faculty, and administrators recognize legal
research as a fundamental skill, legal research programs can
reorganize to provide the necessary legal research skills in a manner
that supports a holistic approach to legal education. 273 To achieve
this, schools should be guided by four principles. First, legal
research must be integrated with the first-year legal curriculum as a
whole, not merely taught as a small part of legal writing. 74 Second,
legal research must be taught as an iterative and analytical process of
problem solving. 275 Third, legal research classes must explicitly
teach information literacy skills.276 Fourth, legal research must be
taught using the progressive pedagogies already adopted in other law
school skills classes.2 77 The elements of these principles overlap to
some degree, and many schools include some or most of them in
advanced legal research courses.2 78 However, in order to meet the
270. See id. § 5(b)(ii)(A)-(B), at 174 (indicating that communication requires selection,
articulation, and documentation of legal theories, which cannot be done without legal
research).
271. See supra note 215 and accompanying text (discussing the ABA MODEL RULES OF
PROF'L CONDUCT).
272. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 101 (indicating that legal research is an
important skill that defines effective lawyering in legal courses and in practice).
273. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 58-59 (discussing the need for integration of
classes for a more holistic approach to teaching law).
274. See discussion infra Part V.A.
275. See discussion infra Part V.B.
276. See discussion infra Part V.C.
277. See discussion infra Part V.D.
278. See, e.g., J.P. Ogilvy, The Use ofJournals in Legal Education:A Tool for Reflection,
3 CLINICAL L. REv. 55, 73 (1996) (discussing the use of problem-solving activities to
promote interaction and discussion in advanced legal research courses).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
279. See, e.g., Katz, supra note 2, at 924 (describing the range of possible objectives for
skills-based courses).
280. See id. at 922-24.
281. Successfully reorganizing legal research is not merely adding content to current legal
research classes, which is often perceived as requiring that something else be removed
because of time constraints. Rebuilding legal research requires that it be integrated
into the legal education in such a way as to support and build on other portions of a
student's law school experience. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 190-91
(discussing the difference between additive and integrated strategies for legal
education).
282. See, e.g., DEBORAH L. RHODE, PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY: ETHICS BY THE
PERVASIVE METHOD 7 (2d ed. 1998) (discussing legal ethics); M. Isabel Medina,
JustifyingIntegration of Domestic Violence Throughout the Law School Curriculum:
An Introduction to the Symposium, 47 LoY. L. REV. 1, 4 (2001) (discussing domestic
violence).
283. See, e.g., Lisa T. McElroy, From Grimm to Glory: Simulated Oral Argument as a
Component of Legal Education's Signature Pedagogy, 84 IND. L.J. 589, 589 (2009)
(discussing oral argument skills); Carol McCrehane Parker, Writing Throughout the
Curriculum: Why Law Schools Need It and How to Achieve It, 76 NEB. L. REV. 561,
562 (1997) (discussing legal writing).
284. Greenshaw, supra note 173, at 867 ("This Article develops the idea of law as a
rhetorical practice to argue for full integration of legal research and writing into
substantive first-year courses.").
285. CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 12.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
286. If one is uncomfortable discussing either doctrine or lawyering skills with first-year
law students, he or she should not be teaching legal research. Teaching requires far
more than merely knowing one's subject; those who teach must know their subject
extremely well. See, e.g., BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 105. The subject here is
teaching legal research to law students, not to pro se patrons, library students, or
others outside of the profession. Legal research requires confidence in one's
knowledge of doctrine, legal analysis, and lawyering skills. See id.
287. This is what legal writing classes that use the "process method" purport to do.
Problems with the "process method" are detailed above. See supra Part II.A-C.
However, even in those classes, only parts of legal research are directed at the issue
students are writing about. The examples, drills, and other materials are generally
taken from purchased workbooks whose problems do not reflect the major issue the
class is focused on. Finally, if doctrinal classes are not referenced, it reinforces
student perceptions that there is an important and unbridgeable difference between
doctrinal courses and lawyering courses.
288. Deborah Zalesne with David Nadvorney, IntegratingAcademic Skills into First Year
Curricula: Using Wood v. Lucy, Lady Duff-Gordon to Teach the Role of Facts in
Legal Reasoning, 28 PACE L. REV. 271, 281 (2008).
289. Gallacher, supra note 100, at 171. This creates the same synergy as when skills are
combined with substantive law courses. See, e.g., Alice M. Noble-Allgire,
Desegregatingthe Law School Curriculum:How to Integrate More of the Skills and
Values Identified by the MacCrate Report Into a Doctrinal Course, 3 NEV. L.J. 32,
39-40 (2002) (describing the synergistic effect of teaching skills in doctrinal courses).
290. See Parker, supra note 283, at 568-69 ("Even legal writing courses that do not purport
to teach legal analysis fulfill this function to some degree because presentation and
content are often inseparable in practice, and analytic and communicative skills
develop together."). The same is true of legal research--one cannot perform it
without performing legal analysis.
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
305. See BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 141-43 (explaining that context-based problem
solving provides "anchor points" for learning and allows for construction of "schemas
and mental models").
306. See CARNEGIE REPORT, supra note 3, at 98-99.
307. Id.at 99.
308. David A. Binder & Paul Bergman, Taking Lawyering Skills Training Seriously, 10
CLINICAL L. REv. 191, 199 (2003) (discussing conceptual understanding and transfer).
For a more detailed discussion of transfer, see infra notes 346-47 and accompanying
text.
309. See Shirley Lung, The Problem Method: No Simple Solution, 45 WILLAMETrE L. REV.
723, 745-47 (2009). Helping students strengthen how they organize and structure
their legal knowledge is critical to improving their abilities to comprehend and
assimilate information. See id.
310. See Simons, supra note 251, at 370, 373.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
311. Id.at 373 (indicating that the purpose behind legal research is to deal with
indeterminacy).
312. This adheres closely to the circular four stage learning process of "experience,
reflection, theory, and application." See BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 166. Legal
research is a process for teaching oneself about the law, and as such it makes sense
that the process of legal research should reflect optimal experiential learning patterns.
313. See Sabrina Sondhi, Should We Care ifthe Case Digest Disappears?:A Retrospective
Analysis and the Future of Legal Research Instruction, 27 LEGAL REFERENCE SERVS.
Q. 263, 274-75 (2008) (suggesting that as full text searching renders the classic
digest-based legal framework obsolete, there is a need to introduce students to the
conceptual purpose of the digest).
314. Callister, supra note 6, at 34. Such structure can also help students frame their self-
directed learning. See Lung, supra note 309, at 749.
315. See Callister, supra note 6, at 33-34.
316. See BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 142 (explaining that students are more engaged
in learning when it is placed in context); Callister, supra note 6, at 33-34..
317. See McElroy, supra note 283, at 594-95.
318. David A. Binder, Albert J.Moore & Paul Bergman, A Depositions Course: Tackling
the Challenge of Teachingfor ProfessionalSkills Transfer, 13 CLINICAL L. REv. 871,
872, 897-98 (2007).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
323. See Roach, supra note 113, at 308 (observing that incoming law students who should
have received research training in graduate and undergraduate schools lack even
foundational experience conducting research, and are not familiar with basic research
tools) (citations omitted).
324. Id. at 300-01 (reporting that surveys of graduate and undergraduate preparedness
suggest law student preparedness will not improve in the next ten years).
325. See Gallacher, supra note 113, at 193-94 (arguing that law schools must undertake to
teach information literacy); Mark de Jong, A Response to a "Modest Proposal," 97
LAW LIAR. J.193, 193-94 (2005) (arguing for the need to successfully integrate
information literacy into the learning process); Paul D. Callister, Law and Heidegger's
Question Concerning Technology: Prolegomenon to Future Law Librarianship,99
LAW LIBR. J.285, 304 (2007) (urging that improving research skills and information
literacy should be a law library objective); Peoples, supra note 115, at 679 ("Law
librarians should formulate . . . standards and competencies for [teaching] legal
information literacy and integrate them into basic and advanced legal research
instruction."). Several law schools already teach information literacy. See, e.g.,
Richard A. Danner, S. Blair Kauffman & John G.Palfrey, The Twenty-First Century
Law Library, 101 LAW LIAR. J. 143 (2009) (discussing information literacy at Duke
Law School); Kenneth J.Hirsh & Wayne Miller, Law School Education in the 21st
Century: Adding Information Technology Instruction to the Curriculum, 12 WM. &
MARY BILL RTS. J.873, 874, 878 (2004) (describing courses covering information
literacy).
326. Richard A. Danner, Focus on Information Literacy: Law Schools Face Challenges
Posed by Students' Reliance on Online Materialfor Research. NAT'L L. J., July 17,
2000, at C9.
327. See supra Part II.C (discussing the rise in Internet research).
328. See Lung, supra note 309, at 14 (stating that effective problem solving entails
identifying what must be learned, evaluating old and new knowledge, determining
how to locate useful information, and assessing how to apply this new information).
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
reflection that will help students more quickly become effective,
responsible problem-solvers"329 ' will also impart information literacy
skills. Further, today's law students are "just in time learners"
focused on learning information-acquisition skills to find any
information they might need in the future when the need arises.33 °
Information literacy is the key for "just in time" learners to locate,
sort, and manage the oceans of information they will confront
throughout their legal careers.
D. IncorporateProgressivePedagogies in Legal Research
Education
Both Best Practices and the Carnegie Report argue for wholesale
changes in legal education.3 Much of their arguments are based on
legal education's over-reliance on the case dialogue method of
teaching332 and the failure of law schools to adopt adult-learning-
centered educational practices.333 Fortunately, law schools can look
toward the growing body of work on teaching techniques, adult
learning styles, and law school pedagogy produced by clinicians and
skills instructors. 34 Legal research programs should also turn toward
clinics and lawyering programs to improve their courses.
As effectively teaching legal research becomes both more difficult
and more necessary, it is important to create a learning environment
where students are actively engaged in learning legal research.
Adopting progressive education methodologies, most of which are
335. Active learning, a key component of skills education, "seeks to focus students ... on
what they are learning [as well as] how they are learning." Gerald F. Hess, Principle
3: Good PracticeEncouragesActive Learning,49 J. LEGAL EDUC. 401, 402 (1999). It
also requires students to be more active and to accept more responsibility for their
own educations. id. at 401-02.
336. Id. at 402.
337. Id.
338. See generally John 0. Sonsteng et al., A Legal Education Renaissance: A Practical
Approach for the Twenty-First Century, 34 WM.MITCHELL L. REv. 303 (2007)
(emphasizing the importance of a "legal education renaissance").
339. See id. at 400 ("When students leam how to learn from experience, they continue to
learn from experience throughout their careers."); BEST PRACTICES, supra note 4, at 66
(suggesting that law schools include self-reflection and lifelong learning skills as part
of their programs of instruction, and indicating that reflection skills are the "key skill
set of lifelong learners").
340. These students are nicknamed the "just in time" learners. See, McGaugh, supra note
330, at 127-28.
341. See Gary L. Blasi, What Lawyers Know: Lawyering Expertise, Cognitive Science, and
the Functions of Theory, 45 J. LEGAL EDUC. 313, 336-38 (1995).
342. See id. at 355-61 (describing expertise as "structured knowledge" and suggesting
structures are important for transference of knowledge from one circumstance to
another). Blasi also argues that engagement, reflection, and other active learning
environments increase the likelihood that students will create schemas or structures.
Baltimore Law Review [Vol. 39
Id; see also Lung, supra note 309, at 744-45 (contrasting an expert learner's use of
recognition of deep structure with a novice learner's inability to see structure);
Sondhi, supra note 313, at 275 (claiming that inculcating the digest classification
system in students allows them to recognize shared legal context and vocabulary).
343. See supra notes 228-38 and accompanying text.
344. See Franklin, supra note 233, at 130-32 (providing an excellent contrast between
classic and "in context" methods for teaching something as potentially uninteresting
as legal citation). Franklin argues that while legal citation can be taught merely as the
technical application of Bluebook rules, it is better taught by allowing students to
recognize the legal context in which the citation is to be used. Id. at 131-32. Franklin
gives the example of providing a short exercise to students that allows students to
connect the information contained in a legal citation to the substantive legal analysis
for which they are attempting to use the citation. Id. at 131. This provides a context
in which students can actually begin to learn why correct citation format is necessary,
rather than merely memorizing the Bluebook rules. Id. at 131-32.
345. Binder, Moore & Bergman, supra note 318, at 883.
346. Binder & Bergman, supra note 308, at 197-98 ("Learning theorists distinguish
between 'near' and 'far' transfer. Near transfer occurs when students are able to apply
skills that they have been taught to tasks that are relatively routine and repetitive in
nature.... [Far transfer] ... involves situational adaptations and problem solving....
[W]ith 'far transfer tasks, the performer must translate basic principles into tailored
procedures to fit the unique needs of the situation."' (quoting Ruth Clark & Merlin C.
Wittrock, Psychological Principles of Training, in Training and Retraining 77-78
(Sigmund Tobias & J. D. Fletcher eds., 2000))).
347. Id. at 198-202 (describing the techniques and methods that promote transfer).
348. See, e.g., Simons, supra note 251 (teaching research as "structure and process" to
move advanced legal research students beyond a simplistic view of research); Gerdy,
supra note 198 (discussion of learning centered assessments in legal research); Eileen
B. Cohen, Using Cognitive Learning Theories in Teaching Legal Research, 1 No. 3
PERSPECT. TEACHING LEGAL RES. & WRITING 79 (1993).
349. See Hemmens, supra note 103, at 214.
20101 Legal Research as a Fundamental Skill
350. Franklin, supra note 233, at 134 (discussing re-imagining teaching in the context of
legal citation).
351. Felix Frankfurter, The Conditionsfor, and the Aims and Methods of Legal Research,
15 IOWA L. REV. 129, 134 (1930).