Brief a case in your preferred format. In drill-me mode, makes the student state the holding first. Use when the user says "brief [case]", "what's the holding in", "case brief", or pastes a case.
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请帮我安装 askskill 上的 "case-brief" 技能: 1. 下载 https://raw.githubusercontent.com/anthropics/claude-for-legal/main/law-student/skills/case-brief/SKILL.md 2. 保存为 ~/.claude/skills/case-brief/SKILL.md 3. 装好后重载技能,告诉我可以用了
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/law-student/CLAUDE.md → outline/brief preferences.A case brief is a tool for remembering what a case does. This skill makes one in your format — the format you'll actually use in your outline.
Case briefs state holdings, rules, and reasoning. Getting them wrong turns your outline into a false map. The rule for this skill:
[UNCERTAIN: specific reason], and I strongly recommend you confirm against the actual case before putting the brief in your outline. If I don't know the case well enough, I say so.[VERIFY: check your casebook and professor's framing].A brief built on my guess and your good faith is worse than no brief. Better to err toward "I'm not sure — read it yourself" than to invent.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/law-student/CLAUDE.md → outline/brief preferences (format, depth), learning style.
A brief you didn't write is a brief you won't remember. Every mode of this skill defaults to scaffolding the student's brief-writing, not to writing the brief.
What this skill will do in every mode:
What this skill will not do, even if asked:
Exception (the only one): the student explicitly overrides — "I've read it three times, I'm stuck on phrasing the holding, just give me a starter sentence so I can rewrite it." Then write a minimal starter with [VERIFY] flags and prompt them to rewrite in their own words before it goes into an outline.
Drill-me mode: Ask the student to state the holding before anything else:
"You've read this case. What's the holding? One sentence."
If they can't state it, make them read it again. The brief is a memory aid, not a substitute for reading. Then proceed to the scaffold — ask them to state facts, issue, reasoning, and rule in turn. Push back on thin or wrong statements.
Explain-to-me mode: Same scaffolded workflow, softer tone. The skill walks the student through each section, offers structural prompts ("a good holding is one sentence, yes/no + the rule"), but still waits for the student to write the content. Explain-to-me does not mean "write the brief for me." It means "explain what a good brief looks like, and guide me through writing mine."
If the student pastes the case text in either mode, the skill can extract the court's own language into the Facts/Holding/Reasoning slots — that's not writing-for-them, that's pointing at the source.
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IRAC-scaffolded case analysis memo with research gaps flagged — the scaffold, not the analysis. Rule blocks are RESEARCH NEEDED, Application is STUDENT ANALYSIS prompts, Conclusion is blank. Use when a student needs to scaffold a case analysis memo, write up their analysis, or build an IRAC memo for a case.
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