Overview
The four-course series “AI for Lawyers and Other Advocates” takes a skills-based approach to artificial intelligence. Which tools are worth using? What questions are worth asking? And how do advocates of all kinds continue to add value to clients in a world increasingly populated by chatbots, algorithms, and a wide range of other powerful digital products?
Syllabus
Course 1: AI for Lawyers: Obstacles and Opportunities
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore the different obstacles and opportunities that artificial intelligence poses for lawyers and ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: AI for Lawyers: Communication and Creativity
- Offered by University of Michigan. Learn two essential skills needed whenever you have a client to represent or a cause to champion: ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: AI for Lawyers: Time and Tasks
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore ways to use artificial intelligence to help you get more things done in less time. In the third ... Enroll for free.
Course 4: AI for Lawyers: Learning and Leading
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore important questions found at the intersection of artificial intelligence, education, and ... Enroll for free.
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore the different obstacles and opportunities that artificial intelligence poses for lawyers and ... Enroll for free.
Course 2: AI for Lawyers: Communication and Creativity
- Offered by University of Michigan. Learn two essential skills needed whenever you have a client to represent or a cause to champion: ... Enroll for free.
Course 3: AI for Lawyers: Time and Tasks
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore ways to use artificial intelligence to help you get more things done in less time. In the third ... Enroll for free.
Course 4: AI for Lawyers: Learning and Leading
- Offered by University of Michigan. Explore important questions found at the intersection of artificial intelligence, education, and ... Enroll for free.
Courses
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Learn two essential skills needed whenever you have a client to represent or a cause to champion: communication and creativity. This course is the second in the four-part series “AI for Lawyers and Other Advocates.” In it, you will learn how AI can help you write better and how AI can help you speak better. You will also learn how to avoid a danger that can come when you rely too heavily on AI: going on intellectual autopilot and letting your own creativity and problem-solving skills atrophy.
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Explore important questions found at the intersection of artificial intelligence, education, and professional development in the final course of the four-part series “AI for Lawyers and Other Advocates”: How should teachers approach AI?; How should students approach AI?; And what about the leaders of law firms, government agencies, and nonprofit organizations, all of whom know that a key driver of success is making sure their employees have the skills necessary to thrive in a fast-changing world?
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Explore the different obstacles and opportunities that artificial intelligence poses for lawyers and other advocates. What are the pitfalls to avoid? What are the advantages to leverage? This initial course in the four-part series “AI for Lawyers and Other Advocates” is designed to help you become more comfortable with AI, more creative with AI, and better able to evaluate its various strengths and weaknesses.
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Explore ways to use artificial intelligence to help you get more things done in less time. In the third course of the four-part series “AI for Lawyers and Other Advocates,” you’ll learn how to navigate the “AI Delegation Matrix” and spot “Low-Hanging AI Fruit.” You’ll also develop strategies to make sure you don’t hand over the wrong tasks to artificial intelligence tools and end up with heavy, regretful feelings of “delegation remorse.”
Taught by
Patrick Barry