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08/29/2013
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The 2013 convocation held earlier this month was the first opportunity for the incoming class at Brooklyn Law School to listen to Dean Nicholas Allard in the ceremonial courtroom of the Brooklyn Federal Courthouse on Cadman Plaza East. Dean Allard commented: “The walk you just completed with your new classmates from the front of the Law School plaza, through the heart of the Downtown Brooklyn community and into this majestic hall of justice, drives home several important facts: that you are not alone, that you are part of many communities, that our law school is inextricably intertwined – by virtue of location and intentional design – with the center of the legal profession and institutions of justice as the only law school in the largest borough in the City of New York, that a microcosm of the world is within an arm’s-length radius of Joralemon Street.”

Allard commended the students for choosing a law school education during a down economy. Noting that the legal profession has changed, he cautioned students that traditional legal jobs “will likely never return.” He said. “A good legal education, which is expensive and includes demanding reading, writing, scholarly dialogue and practical training, is more necessary, more valuable than at any time before.” Allard’s mention of the high cost of legal education and his remark that traditional legal jobs are quickly diminishing should remind students not to base the cost of their education on the expectation that they will receive a traditional law firm job upon graduation. The Dean said it can also give students the chance to “take a company public” or represent “an entrepreneur working at one of hundreds of start-ups in the Brooklyn Tech Triangle.” Attending a law school in Brooklyn will allow students to be “Brooklyn ready” which means “that we will make sure that you will be ready to be productive members of the 21st century profession from day one.  [It means] being able to handle any curve-ball that a world of changes throws your way, being able to answer tough questions, and forging solutions to new problems that no one has seen or even thought of yet.”

The librarians at the BLS Library have created a Research Guide called 1L Resources, Tips and Tools which describes print and digital resources in the BLS Library to help 1Ls succeed at Brooklyn Law School. The guide has four pages with sub-pages of useful content. See below:

Library Information

  • Borrowing Materials
  • Equipment, Printing and Copying
  • Finding Course Materials

First Year Basics

1L Court Study Aids

  • Civil Procedure
  • Constitutional Law
  • Contracts
  • Criminal Law
  • Property
  • Torts

Research, Writing and Citation

  • Legal Citations
  • Legal Research
  • Legal Writing and Analysis

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08/23/2013
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk

With the launch of the Fall 2013 Semester, the librarians at the Brooklyn Law School Library are pleased to announce that its two blogs, the BLS Library Blog and the Brooklaw Library Weblog, have merged into one combined blog. The newly merged blog will use the name BLS Library Blog. Its new home is http://www.blslibrary.com. To continue reading blog posts by the librarians at the Brooklyn Law School, readers need to update their bookmark to the new URL.

All of the older posts from the two former sites, along with reader comments and resources remain available at the new site. We look forward to seeing you  at http://www.blslibrary.com.

The blog, Government Information, which Brooklyn Law School Library Government Documents Librarian Rosemary Campagna writes, is about Politics, Legislation and Government Documents in the News. That blog retains its own URL at http://governmentinfo.wordpress.com/.

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08/22/2013
profile-icon BLS Reference Desk

Virtually every library database available to you on campus can also be accessed from home, most without a password (with the exception of BloombergLaw, Westlaw, and Lexis – they always require passwords). However, in order to access databases such as HeinOnline, Academic Search Premier, and other useful resources without coming all the way to school, you must first implement the Proxy Server Instructions so that you are communicating with these websites via the BLS server. Instructions for the browsers that work best with these databases can be found on the law school’s website. Please note that once you set up the Proxy Server, you will be required to enter your BLS Username and Password each time you attempt to access the web on the selected browser.  Therefore, you may want to use a browser different from the one you normally use for web browsing.

If you have any difficulty setting up your browser using these instructions, feel free to stop by the Reference Desk and a librarian will be happy to assist you.

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08/21/2013
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The Library recently installed a second mobile charging station.  This charging station is in Library room 104M, which is our lounge for students.  It is to the left as you enter the room and is a gift from Westlaw.  The first charging station is on the ground floor and was described in the Library blog of July 3, 2013.

These charging stations are for cell phones and tablets only.  When using either charging station, remember to sit nearby while your device charges.  The Library is not responsible for unattended devices.

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08/07/2013
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Capture

This week Brooklyn Law School’s Library instituted a new chat reference service.  The service is accessible through the Library’s BLSConnect page, and is available for Brooklyn Law School’s students, faculty, and staff.

Librarians are available to chat during regularly scheduled reference hours.   Reference librarians attempt to respond to instant message questions as quickly as possible.  If you do not get a response back, please leave your email address or phone number, and someone will get in touch with you as soon as possible.

The service is best suited for short, fact-based questions and general questions on finding the relevant resources for a given topic.   If you have a more detailed question, we may encourage you to arrange a meeting with a reference librarian, or to stop by the reference desk during our normal reference hours.

Reference Hours

Monday9:00am-8:00pm
Tuesday-Thursday9:00am-9:00pm
Friday9:00am-6:00pm
Saturday9:00am-5:00pm

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08/02/2013
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the_clock

Now that the NYS Bar Exam is over the library will be scaling back its hours till the beginning of the Fall school semester.

The BLS Library hours through Sunday, August 11th will be as follows –

Monday – Saturday 9:00am – 10:00pm

Sundays – 10:00am – 10:00pm

Enjoy the rest of your summer!

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