Butzel Long’s Women’s Leadership Committee is the Michigan host for the American Bar Association’s (ABA) Woman Advocate Committee’s Regional Education and Networking brown bag lunch program at 1 p.m. on Tuesday, Sept. 22, at the firm’s offices in Ann Arbor, Bloomfield Hills and Detroit.
The featured topic is, “The Grit Project: True Grit and a Growth Mindset,” which is designed to be a discussion-based program where individuals learn about grit and growth mindset and then apply the frameworks to a problem.
The conference call will feature Milana Hogan of Sullivan & Cromwell LLP. She will provide an overview of the Grit & Growth Mindset research. A video will follow outlining two scenarios —“Struggling with Your Workload” and “Bullying in a Deposition.” Local hosts of the program will lead a discussion on how grit and mindset can be applied to the two scenarios.
“The ABA Regional Networking events are excellent opportunities for women attorneys to gather for professional development and networking,” said Robin Luce Herrmann, attorney and shareholder, Butzel Long, and co-chair of the Regional Networking Roundtable subcommittee.
The program is free. All female attorneys are invited to attend the program to discuss gender issues in the profession. Attendees are encouraged to bring a brown bag lunch. Reservations are required and can be emailed to Jennifer Dukarski at dukarski@butzel.com.
- Posted September 14, 2015
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Butzel Long to host ABA meeting
headlines Jackson County
headlines National
- A Mother's Trial: Nurse wrongly accused of child abuse forges career bridging law and medicine to help others
- ACLU and BigLaw firm use ‘Orange is the New Black’ in hashtag effort to promote NY jail reform
- Independence and evidence-based decision-making must drive federal prosecutorial actions, ABA says
- ABA 2025 Celebration of Pro Bono to focus on supporting communities
- Judge tosses Drake’s suit over Kendrick Lamar’s rap song calling him ‘certified pedophile’
- Donna Adelson showed ‘utter lack of remorse’ for law prof’s murder, judge says before sentencing




