Some titles for graduating law students are: Essential Lawyering Skills: Interviewing, Counseling, Negotiation, and Persuasive Fact Analysis by Stefan H. Krieger and Richard K .Neumann (Call #KF300 .E84 2011). Chapters are: Becoming a lawyer — What this book is about — Professionalism — Lawyering for and with the client — Lawyering as problem-solving — Communications skills — Multicultural lawyering — Interviewing — Observation, memory, facts, and evidence — Interviewing the client — Interviewing witnesses — Persuasive fact analysis — How we organize and think about facts — The legal elements model of organizing facts — The chronology model of organizing facts — The story model of organizing facts — Selecting a model for presentation of the case — Strengthening the persuasiveness of your facts — Investigating the facts — Responding to your adversary’s facts — Counseling — What happens when a lawyer counsels a client — An example of counseling : the plant closing — Preparing for counseling : structuring the options — The counseling meeting with the client — Overcoming special problems in counseling — Negotiating — How negotiation works — Negotiation preparation : assessing the parties — Developing a negotiation strategy — Styles and rituals — Following through on your plan — Negotiation tactics.
The Lawyer’s Guide to Professional Coaching: Leadership, Mentoring, and Effectiveness by Andrew Elowitt (Call #KF276.5 .E56 2012). Chapters are: When and why to call a coach — The business case for coaching — Coaching expressly for lawyers and their firms — Coaching compared to other helping professions — An inside look at coaching — More than a fad — Finding and selecting a coach — Law firm mentors as coaches — Law firms leaders as coaches — Lawyers as coaches — Becoming a coach — Looking forward.


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