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Our next guest is Jennifer Wondracek, Director of the Law Library and Professor of Legal Research and Writing at Capital University Law School. Jennifer shares her expertise as a legal technologist and ABA Women of Legal Tech Honoree. She addresses three vital questions: the top technological tools law students and lawyers should leverage, strategies to help new attorneys adapt to firm technologies, and ways law firms can automate routine tasks to prioritize high-value legal work. Drawing on her extensive experience in legal education and technology, Jennifer emphasizes practical solutions, the importance of transferable skills, and the increasing role of generative AI in modern legal practice.
Join Jennifer and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!
As Head Librarian at Capital University Law School, what are the top three technological tools or resources that you believe law students and practicing lawyers should be leveraging right now to enhance legal research and client service?
What are the top three strategies that lawyers can use to help law students clerking for a firm, or new attorneys, quickly adapt to become proficient with the technology platforms and tools used in their practice, particularly when these tools differ from what they learned in law school?
Beyond legal research, what are the top three ways law firms and solo practitioners can use technology to automate routine tasks and create more time for high-value legal work?
In our conversation, we cover the following:
[01:03] Jennifer’s Current Tech Setup
[06:27] Top Technological Tools for Law Students and Practicing Lawyers
[11:23] Case Management Systems and Generative AI
[23:15] Strategies for Law Students and New Attorneys to Adapt to Technology
[31:03] Permissions and Backup Practices
[34:20] Automating Routine Tasks with Technology
[39:41] Favorite Non-Legal AI Tools
Resources:
Connect with Jennifer:
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jennifer-wondracek/
Mentioned in the episode:
Bloomberg (free ethics guidance & opinions list)
Charlotin’s AI Hallucinations Tracker (free)
Database of AI Litigation Tracker (free)
RAILSÂ chart (free-standing order/local rules tracker)
Ropes & Gray Map (free-standing order/local rules tracker)
Hardware mentioned in the conversation:
TCL NXTPAPER 11 Plus Tablet: tcl.com/global/en/tablets/tcl-nxtpaper-11-plus
Software & Cloud Services mentioned in the conversation:
Clio: clio.com/
CoCounsel: thomsonreuters.com/en/cocounsel
Daylite: daylite.app/
Fastcase / vLex: vlex.com/products/fastcase
Goblin Tools: goblin.tools/
IFTTT: ifttt.com/
LawDroid: lawdroid.com/
Legal Tech Hub: legaltechnologyhub.com/
LexisNexis: lexisnexis.com/en-us/gateway.page
NSLT: legaltechsociety.wildapricot.org/
PACER: pacer.uscourts.gov/
Procertas: procertas.com/
TheFormTool: theformtool.com/
Westlaw: legal.thomsonreuters.com/en/westlaw
Zapier: zapier.com/
5
1111 ratings
Our next guest is Jennifer Wondracek, Director of the Law Library and Professor of Legal Research and Writing at Capital University Law School. Jennifer shares her expertise as a legal technologist and ABA Women of Legal Tech Honoree. She addresses three vital questions: the top technological tools law students and lawyers should leverage, strategies to help new attorneys adapt to firm technologies, and ways law firms can automate routine tasks to prioritize high-value legal work. Drawing on her extensive experience in legal education and technology, Jennifer emphasizes practical solutions, the importance of transferable skills, and the increasing role of generative AI in modern legal practice.
Join Jennifer and me as we discuss the following three questions and more!
As Head Librarian at Capital University Law School, what are the top three technological tools or resources that you believe law students and practicing lawyers should be leveraging right now to enhance legal research and client service?
What are the top three strategies that lawyers can use to help law students clerking for a firm, or new attorneys, quickly adapt to become proficient with the technology platforms and tools used in their practice, particularly when these tools differ from what they learned in law school?
Beyond legal research, what are the top three ways law firms and solo practitioners can use technology to automate routine tasks and create more time for high-value legal work?
In our conversation, we cover the following:
[01:03] Jennifer’s Current Tech Setup
[06:27] Top Technological Tools for Law Students and Practicing Lawyers
[11:23] Case Management Systems and Generative AI
[23:15] Strategies for Law Students and New Attorneys to Adapt to Technology
[31:03] Permissions and Backup Practices
[34:20] Automating Routine Tasks with Technology
[39:41] Favorite Non-Legal AI Tools
Resources:
Connect with Jennifer:
LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/jennifer-wondracek/
Mentioned in the episode:
Bloomberg (free ethics guidance & opinions list)
Charlotin’s AI Hallucinations Tracker (free)
Database of AI Litigation Tracker (free)
RAILSÂ chart (free-standing order/local rules tracker)
Ropes & Gray Map (free-standing order/local rules tracker)
Hardware mentioned in the conversation:
TCL NXTPAPER 11 Plus Tablet: tcl.com/global/en/tablets/tcl-nxtpaper-11-plus
Software & Cloud Services mentioned in the conversation:
Clio: clio.com/
CoCounsel: thomsonreuters.com/en/cocounsel
Daylite: daylite.app/
Fastcase / vLex: vlex.com/products/fastcase
Goblin Tools: goblin.tools/
IFTTT: ifttt.com/
LawDroid: lawdroid.com/
Legal Tech Hub: legaltechnologyhub.com/
LexisNexis: lexisnexis.com/en-us/gateway.page
NSLT: legaltechsociety.wildapricot.org/
PACER: pacer.uscourts.gov/
Procertas: procertas.com/
TheFormTool: theformtool.com/
Westlaw: legal.thomsonreuters.com/en/westlaw
Zapier: zapier.com/
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