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Law SchoolChemerinsky back in at UC-IrvineSubmitted by Tom Boone on September 17, 2007 - 2:23pm.
Erwin Chemerinsky, hired then fired last week as Dean for the new law school at UC-Irvine, has accepted a renewed offer from the school to be its inaugural leader. The new dean has these words for his colleagues at Duke:
Given the uproar surrounding Drake's withdrawal of the original offer, this was just about the only way the University could save face and open on time. [WSJ Law Blog] Breaking News: Chemerinsky Accepts Irvine’s Renewed Offer Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Chemerinsky in, then out, at UC IrvineSubmitted by Tom Boone on September 12, 2007 - 3:42pm.
From Brian Leiter's Law School Reports:
Inappropriate political influences aside, how on earth does a university chancellor get all the way through an interview process with Erwin Chemerinsky and not know that he'd be criticized by conservatives? Seriously. Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Magazine asks "What Can Law Schools Do Better?"Submitted by Tom Boone on September 12, 2007 - 6:55am.
The newest issue of the online magazine The Complete Lawyer poses the question, "What Can Law Schools Do Better?" In the magazine's lead article, Roy Stuckey, Professor of Clinical Legal Education at the University of South Carolina School of Law, sums up one of the biggest problem facing law schools:
Stuckey should know: he was the lead author of one of the reports. The theme of experiential and context-based learning spills over into the other articles, each authored by a law school dean or program director, which summarize the efforts of several law schools to improve their student's education. For example, Larry Kramer, Dean of Stanford Law School, speaks on his institution's initiatives:
Dean Kramer mentions three other initiatives currently being undertaken at Stanford: international law, experiential learning and a focus on values. The magazine includes similar articles by Lisa A. Kloppenberg (Dean of the University of Dayton School of Law), Donald J. Polden (Dean of the Santa Clara University School of Law), Daisy Hurst Floyd (Dean of Mercer University’s Walter F. George School of Law) and Kenneth R. Margolis (Professor at Case Western Reserve University School of Law) Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Online background checks for bar and law school admissions?Submitted by Tom Boone on September 10, 2007 - 7:09am.
University of Virginia law librarian Michelle Morris made an interesting proposal recently in the Yale Law Journal Pocket Part:
In developing her argument, Morris refers to an incident involving AutoAdmit.com in which a UC Berkeley law student posted comments about plans for a Virginia Tech copycat shooting spree at Hastings College of Law. Hastings canceled classes and evacuated the law school as a result of this threat. UC Berkeley recommended expulsion for the student involved. In the spring of 2006 I wrote about the potential problems law students might encounter due to "anonymous" online behavior, albeit in a far less dangerous context:
In another post I linked to a news story about the University of South Florida's attempts to educate incoming students about the possible unintended consequences of their online personas:
Morris's proposal is the next logical consequence. In the case of bar admissions, where a thorough background check is sometimes necessary, the proliferation of online pseudonyms makes true thoroughness a challenge. I'm not sure how quickly state bars will implement required disclosure of online aliases, but it's definitely a matter of "When," not "If." [Yale L.J. Pocket Part] The Legal Profession, Personal Responsibility, and the Internet Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
2008 ABA-LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools now onlineSubmitted by Tom Boone on September 6, 2007 - 6:51am.
The 2008 edition of the ABA-LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools is now online. The detailed data and search functionality allows users to "search for the right law school for you using criteria that you select (e.g., employment rates after graduation, bar passage rate, size of faculty, student body breakdown, tuition, etc.)." (via Law Librarian Blog) Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Web stats, teaching undergrads and the CALI conferenceSubmitted by Joshua Brauer on June 19, 2007 - 5:06pm.
Some great sessions at the CALI conference. Personally I didn't get to Tom's presentation but did see a couple today that are worth commenting on. Logfiles 101: Lies, Dammed Lies, and Statistics was interesting and had some good new ideas. Overall one impression I came away with is a dislike for Google Analytics. Certainly there are plenty of things to be not terribly thrilled about with Analytics but it seems this point of view overlooks one of the most important elements of web analysis in general. If you don't do it, all the log files in the world aren't worth much. So many times the perfect becomes the enemy of the good and this is completely true of analytics. I've written elsewhere about the benefits I see in using Google Analytics. CALI for Undergraduates and for Transition to Law School by professors Pollman, Shoben and Hays, all of UNLV, presents some excellent ideas for helping undergraduates in preparing for law school. Schools can license CALI for other departments (in this case Political Science) for very reasonable rates (i.e. $250). Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Law students uniting to improve the big firm lifestyleSubmitted by Tom Boone on April 4, 2007 - 11:41am.
A new organization of students from the nation's law schools are asking large firms to change the conditions under which new associates work. Law Students Building a Better Legal Profession, which consists of about 125 students from around the country, recently sent out an email articulating its Principles. That message went to representatives at firms in the AmLaw 100, a ranking of the nation's largest law firms based on gross revenue. An excerpt...
I'm curious to see if this effort has any substantial impact. After all, there are already plenty of jobs available for attorneys who want to work fewer hours and make less money. Those jobs just don't happen to exist at the nation's largest law firms. Is there any real economic incentive for these firms to comply with the groups principles? I suspect that the high demand for these prestigious if backbreaking jobs will ensure that few firms take the group's letter seriously. Until ALL top graduates refuse to take these jobs, conditions won't improve. [WSJ.com Law Blog] You Say You Want a Big-Law Revolution (via Law School Innovation) Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
HLS grad still dealing with racist falloutSubmitted by Tom Boone on April 3, 2007 - 11:06am.
Today's Washington Post includes a profile of Kiwi Camara, an aspiring law professor who enrolled in Harvard Law School at age 16. Now 22, Camara recently withdrew his application to teach at George Mason University following the revelation that he used a racist phrase in a law school paper...
A tough question, particularly in light of the fact that Camara was already enrolled in an Ivy League law school at the time. Should he be held to a higher standard than other 16 year olds? Or should all 16 year olds be held equally accountable several years down the road. Tough call. [Washington Post] Racist Writing as a Teen Haunted GMU Candidate Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
New guide profiles law school public service programsSubmitted by Tom Boone on April 1, 2007 - 12:27am.
Washington nonprofit organization Equal Justice Works has created an interactive guide to public service opportunities at U.S. law schools...
Newsweek.com hosts the guide on its website. Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
Insider's view of Supreme Court clinicsSubmitted by Tom Boone on April 1, 2007 - 12:08am.
Appellate litigator Howard J. Bashman shares his experience working with the University of Virginia's Supreme Court Litigation Clinic in a column for Law.com...
The Supreme Court eventually denied certiorari on Bashman's case and never actually heard the appeal. [Law.com] A User's Guide to Law School Supreme Court Clinics Bookmark/Search this post with: ( categories: )
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