Is AI breaking how lawyers learn?
AI is making legal work faster, sharper and more efficient.
But as drafting, research and review become increasingly automated, many firms are starting to ask a more uncomfortable question:
What happens to legal judgment when junior lawyers no longer learn by doing?
The tasks once seen as “grunt work” have traditionally played a critical role in building expertise, confidence and commercial thinking. As AI changes the workflow, it may also be changing how lawyers develop.
Join LexisNexis for a live discussion exploring how firms and in-house teams are rethinking training, supervision and mentorship in an AI-enabled profession.
This is not another webinar about productivity gains.
It’s a conversation about the future of legal expertise.
What we’ll discuss
- Whether traditional “grunt work” played a more important role in developing legal judgment than firms realised
- How AI is changing the apprenticeship model of legal training
- What junior lawyers should be learning now — and what skills may matter more in the future
- Whether speed and efficiency are starting to come at the expense of critical thinking and supervision
- How firms and legal teams can continue developing strong lawyers in AI-enabled workflows
- What effective mentorship looks like when AI is involved in drafting and research
Meet the speakers
- Alex Galtieri Deputy General Counsel, Colt
- Emma Danks Head of UK Corporate, Winston Taylor
- Hosted by Matthew Leopold Head of Brand, LexisNexis