Lawyer as Writer

 

To Write Well

Before Writing: Remember What Makes Writing Easy

Exploratory Writing

Little Boxes

Writing an Exploratory Essay

Exploratory Writing: The First Draft

Exploratory Writing: Fundamental Distinctions

Audience of and for Writing

Writers' Conceptions of Audience in Graduate Literature Courses

The Writer's Audience [pt.2]

Audience Matters

Audience and Purpose

Revising Your Writing

On Revision

Responding to Writing

Guidelines for Responding to Your Classmates' Writing

The Writing Process

Paradigm: Online Writing Assistant

How to Write Badly

The Writing Place

The Write Stuff: Writing as a Performing and Political Art

Writing Essays

Conventions of Writing Literary Papers

Notes on Paper Writing

Introduction to the Personal Essay

Beginning the Academic Essay

Writing a Thesis

Writing or Presenting Your Thesis or Dissertation

Teachers Evaluation of Student Writing

Responding to Student Papers

Hypertext Writing

Storyspace

The University of Victoria's Hypertext Writer's Guide

Grammar & Style

Guide to Grammar and Style

Basic Prose Style and Mechanics

Guide to Grammar & Writing

Plain Language

Lawyers Should Use Plain Language

Eschew, Evade, and/or Eradicate Legalese

The Fascinating History of Legal Language

Citation Styles

An Educational Guide to Citation Styles

[My thanks to Bethany, a 5th grade student at Amorita Charter School, for her discovery of the citation styles website.]

Legal Writing

Academic Legal Writing

Writing Centers

Home Page