Session I – Practical Tips for Creating and Using a Trial Notebook – Sean Healy
In this session we will learn practical tips for creating and using a trial notebook. Creation of the trial notebook begins very early in the litigation process, you will learn why that is important. You will also learn how to effectively use your trial notebook in the courtroom during trial.
Key topics to be discussed:
Session II – Organize, Prepare, Succeed: Trial Preparation Techniques for Paralegals – Heather Crawford
This session equips attendees with the essential tools and strategies needed to effectively support trial teams from pretrial planning through trial day execution. Focusing on the creation and management of trial notebooks, attendees will learn how to organize critical materials such as pleadings, exhibits, witness lists, and jury instructions in a format that ensures courtroom readiness. The session explores how to align trial notebook development with pretrial workflows using calendars, checklists, and collaboration with attorneys. Participants will also gain insight into building streamlined exhibit and witness management systems, including tips for pre-marking exhibits and coordinating with court staff and opposing counsel. Additionally, the session examines digital versus paper-based notebooks, offering practical guidance on using electronic tools and hybrid approaches for modern trial preparation. Concluding with trial day readiness, the session includes hands-on strategies for quick access to materials under pressure and practice techniques to help paralegals confidently support attorneys in high-stakes courtroom environments.
Key topics to be discussed:
Session III – May It Please the Court: Effective Trial Practice – Hon. Stephen Kaus and Judge Judith H. Ramseyer
Judges view a successful trial as one that’s well-prepared and runs smoothly. That means having jurors, courtroom staff, exhibits, and technology ready ahead of time, and resolving key motions early. During trial, it’s important to stay organized, scheduling witnesses carefully, limiting surprise motions, and avoiding delays that waste jurors’ time. Judges appreciate it when attorneys work efficiently, present clearly, and treat the courtroom team with respect. Good preparation keeps things moving, shows competence, and shapes how the jury sees the case.
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2025-09-24 13:10:00
2.75 hours program
Trials are not just about the presentation of evidence, they’re about storytelling. Effective trial lawyers understand the importance of identifying, crafting, and delivering stories that build trust, make the complex simple, and captivate listeners. Learn how to deploy storytelling as a versatile tool in trial, to engage the jury or factfinder. This is storytelling with purpose: to build, to bond, and to win.
Key topics to be discussed:
Date / Time: December 18, 2025
Closed-captioning available
2026-04-30 14:00:00
Session I – Practical Tips for Creating and Using a Trial Notebook – Sean Healy
In this session we will learn practical tips for creating and using a trial notebook. Creation of the trial notebook begins very early in the litigation process, you will learn why that is important. You will also learn how to effectively use your trial notebook in the courtroom during trial.
Key topics to be discussed:
Session II – Organize, Prepare, Succeed: Trial Preparation Techniques for Paralegals – Heather Crawford
This session equips attendees with the essential tools and strategies needed to effectively support trial teams from pretrial planning through trial day execution. Focusing on the creation and management of trial notebooks, attendees will learn how to organize critical materials such as pleadings, exhibits, witness lists, and jury instructions in a format that ensures courtroom readiness. The session explores how to align trial notebook development with pretrial workflows using calendars, checklists, and collaboration with attorneys. Participants will also gain insight into building streamlined exhibit and witness management systems, including tips for pre-marking exhibits and coordinating with court staff and opposing counsel. Additionally, the session examines digital versus paper-based notebooks, offering practical guidance on using electronic tools and hybrid approaches for modern trial preparation. Concluding with trial day readiness, the session includes hands-on strategies for quick access to materials under pressure and practice techniques to help paralegals confidently support attorneys in high-stakes courtroom environments.
Key topics to be discussed:
Session III – May It Please the Court: Effective Trial Practice – Hon. Stephen Kaus and Judge Judith H. Ramseyer
Judges view a successful trial as one that’s well-prepared and runs smoothly. That means having jurors, courtroom staff, exhibits, and technology ready ahead of time, and resolving key motions early. During trial, it’s important to stay organized, scheduling witnesses carefully, limiting surprise motions, and avoiding delays that waste jurors’ time. Judges appreciate it when attorneys work efficiently, present clearly, and treat the courtroom team with respect. Good preparation keeps things moving, shows competence, and shapes how the jury sees the case.
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2025-09-24 13:10:00
2.75 hours program
Generative Artificial Intelligence (GenAI) has taken the legal profession by storm. Like most technologies, there are potential benefits; however, if used irresponsibility, the downside can be costly – reputationally, financially and legally. The purpose of this program is to explore the good, the bad and the ugly aspects of GenAI, as well as provide a risk mitigation framework.
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2026-02-03 14:00:00
September 5, 2025
3 Hour Program
October 30, 2025
2 Hour Program
May 8, 2026
2 Hour Program
May 15, 2026
1.5 Hour Program

Federal Practitioners, please join the Federal Bar Association Diversity and Inclusion Committee for a webinar where you will be able to learn more about how to make your professional association reflect the rich diversity of the legal community. The Committee will discuss implementing plans for Diversity and Inclusion and the Chapter, Section and Division levels that will work with all associations. The roadmap and tools to achieve diversity and inclusion can be scaled for larger bars and their events, but also for use on a smaller scale such as law firms. Learn from the work of the FBA D&I Communications Subcommittee on best practices for ensuring law related bar association events, programs, and communications are accessible to people with disabilities; and D&I resources available to bars ranging from specialty, local, state, and nationwide.
Presented by the Diversity and Inclusion Committee
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2024-02-28 11:00:00

The class will focus on the latest legal challenges to ABA Model Rule 8.4(g), which prohibits harassment and discrimination by attorneys, recent EEOC actions against law firms, and best practices for working toward avoidance of bias in the legal industry.
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2024-03-21 13:00:00
This webinar will focus on how the adjudicator’s implicit bias affects their decisions about credibility and their exercise of discretion. While adjudicators may recognize their own bias, this may not necessarily lead to stopping bias. Judges know that they need to assess credibility, and appellate judges are not supposed to replace their determination. The demeanor of the defendant, witnesses, prosecutor, and defense attorney can make a difference in the outcome of cases.
A professor, a former administrative law judge, and a District Court judge will discuss how adjudicators can recognize and attempt to eliminate implicit bias in decision-making.
Presented by the FBA Professional Development Committee and Judiciary Division
Key topics to be discussed:
Closed-captioning available
2024-04-11 14:00:00
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