Symposium Ideas
On Friday I attended a panel session featuring Paul Goldman from Texas Law Publications, Zach Burt from Texas Wesleyan Law Review, and Dwazendra Smith from the Journal of Race, Gender & Poverty at Southern University Law Center.
Excellent panel with a wealth of useful tips.
* The importance of regular communication with symposium speakers, even when there is no real news. Ping them once/month to motivate them and keep them abreast of symposium news
* Hold an award banquet in conjunction with your symposium, and get a professional photographer to document the banquet. Present an achievement award to a local member of the bar, also any student awards
* Charge for CLE credits (~$10/hour was low figure given)
* Enable credit-card payment through your website
* Web presence is very important--make sure your symposium website is well prepared
* Plan on 1-2 invited speakers backing out. You should have a couple back-up speakers.
* Minimum of six months to plan and organize the symposium
* See Paul Goldman's resources on the UT Publications website--all of Paul's documents, including a budget sheet and sample fundraising letter are available
* The importance of budgeting and fundraising. Students usually underbudget and miss details. One student's budget went from $1,000 to $12,000. Low figure for one-day symposium seemed to be ~$3,000
Saturday, March 21, 2009
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Arrival
Arrived this afternoon in Baton Rouge for the National Conference of Law Reviews 2009. I'll be taking notes here to share with our journal staff.
http://www.nclr2009.com/
It will be a fun conference, and I'm especially looking forward to the crawfish boil on the Mississippi in a couple days.
http://www.nclr2009.com/
It will be a fun conference, and I'm especially looking forward to the crawfish boil on the Mississippi in a couple days.
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