Law Practice
Dec. 16, 2019
On law schools, part 3
In my last column I endorsed Judge Curtis A. Karnow’s view that law professors are “disconnected” from the real world of law practice. But what about law professors’ writing? Is that also “disconnected” from the real world?





Myron Moskovitz
Legal Director
Moskovitz Appellate Team
90 Crocker Ave
Piedmont , CA 94611-3823
Phone: (510) 384-0354
Email: myronmoskovitz@gmail.com
UC Berkeley SOL Boalt Hal
Myron Moskovitz is author of Strategies On Appeal (CEB, 2021; digital: ceb.com; print: https://store.ceb.com/strategies-on-appeal-2) and Winning An Appeal (5th ed., Carolina Academic Press). He is Director of Moskovitz Appellate Team, a group of former appellate judges and appellate research attorneys who handle and consult on appeals and writs. See MoskovitzAppellateTeam.com. The Daily Journal designated Moskovitz Appellate Team as one of California's top boutique law firms. Myron can be contacted at myronmoskovitz@gmail.com or (510) 384-0354. Prior "Moskovitz On Appeal" columns can be found at http://moskovitzappellateteam.com/blog.
In my last column I endorsed Judge Curtis A. Karnow's view (in Karnow, "Dissolving Legal Barriers," Daily Journal, Feb. 20, 2019) that law professors are "disconnected" from the real world of law practice, by recounting my own experience teaching law. I had tried to persuade profs to move from teaching by the "case method" to teaching by the "problem method," so students would learn how to analyze a client's problem and advise the client re ...
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