Amid growth in AI writing tools, this course teaches future lawyers and other professionals to become better editors
- Written by Patrick Barry, Clinical Assistant Professor and Director of Digital Academic Initiatives (University of Michigan Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (University of Chicago Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (UCLA School of Law), University of Michigan
That doesn’t mean that a technology with those capacities won’t eventually develop, nor that the technology we already have can’t provide enormously useful editing assistance. In fact, more and more of my assignments in “Editing and Advocacy” give students a chance to play around with ChatGPT-like tools. I have also created an entirely separate course called “Digital Lawyering: Advocacy in the Age of AI” that explores the possibilities – and pitfalls – of using artificial intelligence as a kind of co-counsel.
But as I often remind students in both classes, editing is as much about imagination, emotional intelligence and restraint as it is about syntax, semicolons and subject-and-verb agreement. A good way to become better at it is to cultivate the parts of you that are most human.
What materials does the course feature?
Hoping to save my students some money — and wanting to make the materials of the course easily available online — I worked with the publishing team[4] at the University of Michigan to create a set of open-access books that anyone with an internet connection can read for free. These include “Editing and Advocacy[5],” “Notes on Nuance[6],” “Punctuation and Persuasion[7]” and “Feedback Loops: How to Give and Receive High-Quality Feedback[8].”
We also use videos, quizzes and exercises from Good with Words: Writing and Editing[9], a series of online courses I created for the educational platform Coursera[10].
What will the course prepare students to do?
Editing involves reliably making informed, value-creating decisions. You need to know what to add. You need to know what to delete. You need to know what to separate, combine and rearrange. Students in the course study, evaluate and regularly participate in those types of decisions. In the process, they develop an extremely important and highly transferable skill: good judgment.
References
- ^ Uncommon Courses (theconversation.com)
- ^ Charlie Warzel suggested (www.theringer.com)
- ^ made a similar point (wsjcustomevents.com)
- ^ publishing team (www.publishing.umich.edu)
- ^ Editing and Advocacy (www.fulcrum.org)
- ^ Notes on Nuance (www.fulcrum.org)
- ^ Punctuation and Persuasion (www.fulcrum.org)
- ^ Feedback Loops: How to Give and Receive High-Quality Feedback (www.fulcrum.org)
- ^ Good with Words: Writing and Editing (www.coursera.org)
- ^ Coursera (www.coursera.org)
Authors: Patrick Barry, Clinical Assistant Professor and Director of Digital Academic Initiatives (University of Michigan Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (University of Chicago Law School) | Visiting Lecturer (UCLA School of Law), University of Michigan