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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请帮我安装 askskill 上的 "memo" 技能: 1. 下载 https://raw.githubusercontent.com/anthropics/claude-for-legal/main/legal-clinic/skills/memo/SKILL.md 2. 保存为 ~/.claude/skills/memo/SKILL.md 3. 装好后重载技能,告诉我可以用了
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/CLAUDE.md → practice areas, jurisdiction./legal-clinic:memo
The case analysis memo is where the student's thinking lives. This skill provides the IRAC scaffolding and flags the research gaps — the student fills in the analysis.
The analysis is the student's. This skill structures; it doesn't conclude.
~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/CLAUDE.md → practice areas, jurisdiction, supervision style.
Intake summary and case notes for facts.
Read the supervisor guide for this practice area at ~/.claude/plugins/config/claude-for-legal/legal-clinic/guides/<practice-area>.md. Check the pedagogy_posture setting:
guide (default): Produce the IRAC structure and the research-gap list. Ask the student to draft each rule statement themselves from research, rather than giving them a framework. Give feedback on what they wrote. Offer to fill the framework rule for a section only when the student has tried once.assist: Produce the memo scaffold and fill what can be filled. Flag items for student review. The student edits and learns by reviewing. (Note: this memo skill always leaves the [STUDENT ANALYSIS] and [STUDENT CONCLUSION] blocks blank by design — assist means the skill produces the IRAC scaffold and framework rule statement; it does not produce the application or the conclusion.)teach: Don't produce the framework or the scaffold content. Ask the student to frame the issues, state the rules from their research, and do the application. Give feedback. Ask leading questions when they're stuck. Only show a model rule statement or a model application paragraph after two attempts, and only for the section they're stuck on. Track what they got right and wrong so the supervisor can see progress.If no guide exists, use guide. If the guide exists but doesn't set a posture, use guide.
Whatever the posture, the output always includes: "Pedagogy mode: [assist/guide/teach] — set by your supervisor's guide. This means I [description of what the student did vs what the skill did]."
From the intake summary and case notes: what are the legal questions this case presents?
State each as a question. Not "habitability" — "Can the client assert a habitability defense to the eviction based on the broken heater, and if so, does it offset the rent owed?"
If there are multiple issues, each gets its own IRAC block.
For each issue:
Issue: Stated as a question (from Step 1).
Rule: This is a research gap, not a conclusion. State what the student needs to find:
[RESEARCH NEEDED: [State] habitability doctrine — warranty of habitability elements, what conditions qualify, remedies available including rent offset. Start with: [State] landlord-tenant statute, then case law on heater/heat specifically. See /research-start for a roadmap.]
If the skill has high confidence in the general rule framework (e.g., "most states recognize an implied warranty of habitability"), state that as a framework starting point — but explicitly mark it as unverified:
Framework (unverified — confirm for [State]): Most jurisdictions recognize an implied warranty of habitability requiring landlords to maintain conditions fit for human occupation. Breach may give rise to rent withholding, repair-and-deduct, or rent abatement.
[VERIFY: [State]'s specific elements and remedies]
…
Draft a DMCA takedown notice, triage one you received, or draft a §512(g) counter-notice. Use when asserting copyright through a §512(c)(3) takedown with the fair-use and perjury gates, when an incoming takedown needs triage into comply / counter / engage / ignore options, or when drafting a §512(g)(3) counter-notice with the consent-to-federal-jurisdiction gate.
Search watched registries for community legal skills, showing matches with descriptions and offering to show the full SKILL.md before install. Use when the user says "browse", "search skills", "find a skill for", "what's out there for", or wants to add a new registry to the watchlist.
Case status summary by audience — client-facing (plain language), internal (for the professor), or court-ready (formal caption format per local rules). Same facts, different framing and depth. Use when a student needs to update the client, brief the professor, or prepare a court status report.
Draft a brief section in house style, consistent with the case theory — every fact cited, every case checked, every argument tied to the theory. Use when the user says "draft the [section]", "write the statement of facts", "argument section on [issue]", or needs a first draft of a brief section.
Build a deposition outline for a witness — pull their documents from the eDiscovery platform, organize topics around the case theory, and surface impeachment material. Use when the user says "depo prep for [witness]", "build a depo outline", or "prepare for [name]'s deposition".
Manage matter workspaces — create, list, switch, close, or detach the active matter. Use in multi-client private practice to keep one client's context separate from another, or when a substantive skill needs to know which matter it's working in.