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Archive for January, 2014

8 Legal News Websites for Legal Professionals

Wednesday, January 29th, 2014

In the legal field, it is a good idea to stay informed on the latest news that happens in your area of practice. You are likely very busy at the job of being a legal professional and may not find a lot of time to spend catching up on changes.  Luckily, today there are many resources for legal news you can easily find on the internet that will allow you to see what’s new in your practice area.

Here are 8 legal news websites that are good resources for legal professionals:

1. The Daily Business Review

This online newspaper is a good source of news about all things business.  The site also offers specialized news such as the following special reports, which include:

  • Intellectual Property
  • Wealth Management
  • Most Effective Lawyers 2013

If you prefer, you can download the entire recent edition in pdf format to print and take with you.

2. The Lawyer

The Lawyer.com is a website for the entire legal profession. It contains the latest legal industry news, briefings and insights.  This publication offers news for several specific practice areas and several international geographical locations.

Categories include:

  • Latest News
  • Market Analysis
  • Opinion
  • Lawyer Global Newsletter
  • … and others.

3. The Legal Intelligencer

The oldest law journal in the United States, The Legal Intelligencer delivers in-depth analysis and coverage of legal issues that go beyond the headlines.

Sections of the publication include:

  • News
  • Litigation
  • Business
  • Practice Pointers

4. The Wall Street Journal Law Section

The Wall Street Journal reports on several different industries. The Law Section of the Wall Street Journal informs about legal news, personal injury news, legal issues, state law, bankruptcy litigation, regulations and more. 

Topic categories include:

  • Legal News
  • Law Blogs
  • Bankruptcy Beat
  • Legal Notices
  • Risk and Compliance

5. Alltop Law

Alltop collects headlines of the latest stories from the best sites and blogs that cover a topic. They group these collections into individual web pages. Then they display the five most recent headlines of the information sources as well as their first paragraph. This is a great place to skim the stories from several publications at once, then decide which you want to read.  There are dozens of legal industry blogs and websites listed on one page to scan at once.

6. Jurist

Jurist is a web-based legal news and real-time legal research service powered by a mostly-volunteer team of over 60 part-time law student reporters, editors and Web developers. Jurist uses the latest Internet technology to track important legal news stories and materials and present them rapidly and objectively in a format that is easy to peruse.

Categories of interest include:

  • US Legal News
  • World Legal News
  • Professional Commentary
  • Academic Commentary
  • Student Commentary

7. Law 360

Law360 publishes news and analysis on business law for paying subscribers. The publication provides coverage on litigation, corporate transactions, and regulations. Law360 publishes more than 150 articles per day across 35+ legal practice areas such as intellectual property, white-collar crime, commercial contracts, class action and banking.

8. Law.com

Law.com connects legal professionals to more than 20 national and regional legal publications online, including The American Lawyer, The National Law Journal, New York Law Journal and Legal Times.  Through Law.com’s linked information sites, legal professionals can track developments in their practice specialties, research legal technology purchases, and participate in accredited online training,

To stay on top of legal news, find a handful of online resources that give good information on the areas of the legal world in which you are involved.  Then visit these websites regularly to see what changes have been happening that you need to know about.

If you enjoyed this article, you may also like “4 Excellent Online Grammar Resources for Legal Professionals.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jane Jones is a court reporter, Co-Founder and Co-Owner of Brown & Jones Reporting, Inc. Connect with her on LinkedIn and Google+.

Posted in All Posts | No Comments » | Add Comments

Court Reporting Dictionary Building Tips for Court Reporters

Monday, January 6th, 2014

Every court reporter begins as a student, learning steno theory, and eventually putting steno notes through computer aided software to see what translates.  At first, with a very small dictionary, very little steno will translate.  That means a new court reporter will spend hours editing and changing the untranslated steno to English to create a finished transcript.  Every year, a court reporter adds to the court reporting dictionary, making it better and better.  The goal is to create a dictionary that will translate most of what is written.  This means a court reporter will spend less time editing, will produce pages faster, and will make more money in less time.

Perfecting the court reporting dictionary is not just for new reporters.  Working on your dictionary is one way you can continue to develop as a court reporter and get better and better at what you do.  But what does it take to perfect a court reporter’s dictionary?  The answer can be different for every court reporter.

Dictionary Building for the New Court Reporter

For a new court reporter, adding words to the dictionary, particularly legal terms, is a great place to start.  Find a legal dictionary reference book or website, sit down with your steno machine, and begin writing terminology.  Once you’ve written a list of words, begin defining and adding the terms to your dictionary.

Dictionary Building for the Experienced Court Reporter

If you are a reporter who has been writing for several years, it is likely that your writing theory has changed from the time when you first became a court reporter. In fact, your writing might have changed drastically. If that is the case, then you probably have a gigantic dictionary with words defined several different ways that are compatible with your old style of writing and your new theory.  If you find your CAT system mistranslating terms often, you may want to begin sifting through your dictionary.  Some court reporters begin by eliminating long phrasing that are defined in the old theory. It is true that combing through a very large dictionary is time consuming; however, this is a task that can be done a few minutes at a time.  When you have down time before a deposition or a few minutes at the end of your work day, open up your dictionary and continue eliminating unnecessary definitions.

We should note that some court reporters never eliminate entries as long as they are not mistranslating. Instead, they focus on regularly reviewing the current theory they are writing and adding words that are not yet in the dictionary.  Some court reporting software allows you to sort your dictionary by the date an entry was last used.  Thus, you can look at all of your entries that you have not used for years, and decide whether to delete them.

Specialized Dictionary Building

If you are beginning to work on depositions with specialized language, such as medical depositions or technical depositions, you can often find a specialized dictionary or a number of terminology lists online.  Adding this specialized language will help you breeze through the next time you have medical or technical testimony.  You will be glad you spent the time to define new words and add them to your dictionary.

Dictionary Building with a Partner

If you’re not sure where you want to start with dictionary work, you might consider asking a court reporting friend to review your raw steno notes and make suggestions on ways of writing that you have not considered.  You can do the same in return for your partner.  You may be surprised to hear some simple suggestions that you’re not familiar with that can help you improve your writing and your translation rate. 

These are just a few strategies for building your dictionary. How you decide to tackle your dictionary work is up to you.  Try different strategies and decide which work for you.  The most important thing to remember is that you are working to increase your translation rate so that you can write more cleanly.  This higher translation is the key to becoming faster at transcribing which will allow you to produce more pages and make more money.  The time you spend on your dictionary, in the long run, can pay off over and over in the years to come.

If you found this article interesting, you may also like “Resources for Keeping Up with the Latest Court Reporting Technologies.”

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

Susan Kay is a Co-Founder and Co-Owner of Brown & Jones Reporting, Inc. Connect with her on LinkedIn and Google+.

Tags: court reporters, Court Reporting Dictionary
Posted in Court Reporting | No Comments » | Add Comments

 
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