We are now accepting session proposals for CALIcon24

For over 34 years, CALIcon, The Conference for Law School Computing®, has organized its schedule at nearly the last minute in order to bring the most relevant and up-to-date presentations to attendees. This year is no different and we are looking for law school faculty, librarians, and technologists with strong opinions, great ideas, interesting projects, and useful advice. Come and share and be challenged.

For 2024 we are planning the conference as an in-person, live event. We will gather at the University of Washington School of Law in Seattle, WA  on Thursday and Friday, June 13 – 14, 2024, as well as providing a live stream of the full conference. We’re combining the formula that we’ve used the past couple of years with our tried and true structure that worked well for us prior to 2020. This means that we’re going to have 60-minute long sessions with thirty-minute breaks between sessions. Each session will consist of up to 3 15-minute talks with 15 minutes for discussion. We’re also accepting 30 and 45 minute long proposals to accommodate more in-depth talks and panels.

We are planning to run concurrent sessions at CALIcon this year but that depends on the number of proposals submitted. We’ll need 40+ sessions to successfully use our multi-room format so we need your session proposal.  If your session is accepted, you should be prepared to present live in Seattle.

The theme for CALIcon24 is Exploring The Unknown Unknowns of #LegalEd + #Tech. While we would like proposals to work with that theme we are, as always, flexible. The community has a voracious appetite for tech and the conference has always been the place to talk about it. Here are some topics that we think are particularly relevant today, but don’t be constrained by this list …

  • ChatGPT & other openai.com APIs: Changing legal education? Good, bad?
  • AI/ML, ethics, law, and legal education
  • Access to Justice / Teaching / Technology / Legal Education
  • Prepping law school tech for the NextGen bar exam
  • Navigating the relationship with IT – Local and University
  • Video Post Production – Tips & Tricks & Tools
  • I want to talk about Drupal or Regex or Python
  • Why isn’t there more formative assessment in law school courses?
  • What should we do to prepare for the NEXT pandemic?
  • Peer-grading software options – can students become the teacher?
  • Open casebooks, open teaching materials, open syllabi – what’s not to like?
  • LSSE says law students like/learn online just fine.
  • Online Legal Education that is not just JD – MLMs, LLMs, foreign and domestic, insourced and outsourced
  • Is 2024 the year of Tech Competency for Lawyers?
  • Can I ignore VR for a few more years?
  • What’s beyond Zoom?  (beyond polling, breakout rooms, and boring video)
  • Should all law students learn to program/blog/toot – at least a little?

TO PROPOSE A SESSION:

To propose a session, click here and fill out the form.  You must submit your proposal by Friday, March 29, 2024. Presenters will be notified by Friday, April 12, 2024, if their presentation is accepted. All submissions will be archived on the conference website.

Accepted speakers will be able to register for $95 with a special code that will be sent when your session is accepted.

Questions, problems, ideas, suggestions, contact Elmer Masters – emasters@cali.org.

The Center for Computer-Assisted Legal Instruction (CALI) was founded as a 501(c)(3) consortium of law schools in 1982.

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