[blindlaw] Westlaw student inquiry
Rod Alcidonis
roddj12 at hotmail.com
Sun Feb 18 20:52:53 CST 2007
In my opinion, Deborah, the text only is crap. Take the time and frustration
to learn the graphic version and it'll pay off when your legal writing class
is in full swing!
Rod Alcidonis, J.D Candidate, 2009.
Roger Williams University School of Law
10 Metacom Ave., Box: 9003
Bristol, RI 02809
Home: (401) 824-8685
Cell: (718) 704-4651
E-mail: roddj12 at hotmail.com
-----Original Message-----
From: blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org [mailto:blindlaw-bounces at nfbnet.org] On
Behalf Of Scott G
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 7:55 PM
To: NFBnet Blind Law Mailing List
Subject: Re: [blindlaw] Westlaw student inquiry
Debra,
I'm in my last year of law school at Florida State and I have had some
experience with both versions of Westlaw, but admittedly less with the
general westlaw.com site. You could say that the sighted westlaw.com site
is like Windows XP and the text.westlaw.com site is like DOS in its
complexity. I would recommend learning how to use both versions of Westlaw
for your convenience, and especially what is available on the westlaw.com
site which is not available on the text.westlaw.com site. The orientation
of the page may be altered frequently and thus be more difficult to navigate
through but the additional features available through that site are quite
powerful and useful. The text.westlaw.com site is great, especially if you
are just looking around for curiosity on a subject and don't care to track
your research, or if you need to pull up a specific statute to read, but the
westlaw.com site will allow you more options to view your results and keep
track of your research.
I don't know what screen reader you're using, or even if you're visually
impaired enough to need a screen reader, but I am completely blind and a JFW
user myself and I can give you some tips that may help with navigating
Westlaw. . With JFW you can place bookmarks on a web page to locate links
that you use frequently so that navigating a visually complex site like
westlaw.com can be made a bit easier, but of course whenever they reorganize
the page you would be forced to redo those bookmarks. Another thing you can
do with JFW is search for particular text on a web page; and this can be
quite useful when you know that there is a specific link, or passage marker
of some sort on a web page but the reorganization has moved it away from a
bookmark you placed on that link/marker previously. You can find the
link/marker that way and then reposition the bookmark accordingly.
Unfortunately the westlaw.com page is quite complex and frustrating to use
with a screen reader but I would say it's worth the aggravation to learn
since it will give you better capabilities to complete your legal research.
I hope this has helped in some way and feel free to contact me off list
if you wish to continue this conversation one-to-one.
Sincerely,
Scott Greenblatt
ScottGreenblatt at earthlink.net
----- Original Message -----
From: "Deborah Byrne" <deborahbyrne at earthlink.net>
To: "Blindlaw" <blindlaw at nfbnet.org>
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 7:24 PM
Subject: [blindlaw] Westlaw student inquiry
Hello All,
I would like to take a moment to introduce myself and ask a question about
Westlaw. I will be starting law school at the University of Washington next
fall. I already have a student account with Westlaw and I thought it would
give me a head start to learn how to use the website now. I'm wondering if
those of you experienced with the database have an opinion on the pros and
cons of the text only version versus the sighted site. One person at
Westlaw said the content of the two sites is quite different; another person
said they are almost identical. I've heard that the text only version does
not allow you to trail your research while on the other hand the design of
the sighted sight is complex and rearranged as frequently as every week.
I'm not sure which to go with.
What do you think? Would I lose valuable resources if I learn the text only
version instead of the regular version?
Thank you for your feedback
Deborah Byrne
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