April 17, 2009 - Rutgers Law Review 2009 Symposium
“A LegalEducation Prospectus: Law Schools & Emerging Frontiers in Curriculum, Lawyering, and Social Justice”! Rutgers gathered an amazing group of speakers to discuss innovative approaches to legal education, including curricular reform, the use of technology, and the unique potential for law schools to inculcate public and professional values in students.
For more information about the Symposium, please visit: http://pegasus.rutgers.edu/~review/symposium09.php
Check back soon for materials from this conference!
March 6 – 7, 2009 – University of Maryland School of Law hosted a national conference on Best Practices in Clinical Legal Education. The conference gathered educators to explore and summarize the best practices discussions taking place all over the country and in the academy in response to the recently published Carnegie Report Educating Lawyers, and Best Practices for Legal Education by Roy Stuckey. Programs that are implementing the reports’ recommendations were explored.January 7, 2009 – AALS Section – Teaching to the Entire Class: Innovative and Effective Instruction to Engage Every Student
September 5 -7, 2008 – University of Washington School of Law has agreed to host a conference addressing efforts to implement the insights from Best Practices and Educating Lawyers. The conference will be entitled Legal Education at the Crossroads: Ideas to Implementation.
July 24-25, 2008 – Michigan State University College of Law hosted the Great Lakes Symposium on Clinical Scholarship & Best Practices. This conference ”initiated a dialogue among clinical educators in an effort to enhance the clinical experience for all participants,” while allowing clinicians to identify appropriate clinical scholarship opportunities and best practices for clinical legal education. The program provided a forum for clinicians to share experiences, teaching and research methods, and recent innovations in clinical education.
June 19-21, 2008 – University of Maryland School of Law hosted the annual CALI conference (Conference for Law School Computing). This year’s theme was “Transforming Legal Education.” The keynote speaker was Paul Maharq.
June 12-14, 2008 – University of New Mexico School of Law & The Southwest Indian Law Clinic hosted the Second Annual Indian Law Clinics & Externship Program Symposium entitled, Moving towards Best Practices for Indigenous Representation: “Listening to our Communities, Assessing our past, Reframing our future-clinical methodology, pedagogy, and curriculum design”
This event was designed for clinicians or extern program supervisors training future lawyers to represent Native peoples, those who work with tribes or in Indigenous communities, lawyers who work with clinics to deliver legal services to these communities, and other community lawyering clinicians. It was held at the Tamaya Hyatt Resort at Santa Ana Pueblo, New Mexico, just 20 minutes North of Albuquerque, NM.
The Indian Law Clinic and Externship Symposium is funded by institutional donations and registration fees. Your support is greatly appreciated and necessary for continuing our work. . Co-Sponsors of this event include: Tribal Law Practice Clinic; Washburn University School of Law; University of Denver, Sturm College of Law; Arizona State University, Sandra Day O’ Connor College of Law.
March 28 – 29, 2008 - CUNY School of Law – Haywood Burns Conference – “Teaching Law in a Multi-cultural, Multi-lingual Context.”
CUNY School of Law and the Center for Diversity in the Legal Profession hosted the 2008 Haywood Burns Conference. Among the topics presented: providing access and diversity through Pipeline programs; the immigrant experience in law school , understanding the multiplicity of “cultures” within law students; clinical approaches to multiculturalism from the perspective of faculty, student, and client; strategies for reaching first-year students in the small or large classroom.
March 21, 2008 – American University Washington College of Law hosted “Innovations in First Year Curriculum.” Affirmation of the importance of rethinking the first year is evident in the Carnegie Foundation Report issued in 2007, the Best Practices for Legal Education project, and most recently in the Session at the Annual Meeting of the AALS in January 2008 (Reassessing Our Role As Scholars and Educators in Light of Change).This event brought together academic leaders to discuss some of the dynamic changes in theory and pedagogy related to the first year experience.
February 20-23, 2008 – Georgia State Law School hosted an International Conference on the Future of Legal Education. The conference focused on two questions: 1) if one was starting a new law school, how would one incorporate the recommendations of the Carnegie Foundation’s report on legal education, and 2) how might an existing law school transform itself into the kind of law school envisioned by Carnegie? For further information, visit the conference website at http://law.gsu.edu/FutureOfLegalEducationConference
January 4, 2008 - Plenary session at AALS on ”Rethinking Legal Education for the 21st Century” featuring Edward L. Rubin (Vanderbilt University Law School), Vicki C. Jackson (Georgetown University Law Center), Robert Mac Crate, Esq. (Senior Counsel, Sullivan and Cromwell), Martha L. Minow (Harvard Law School), Suellyn Scarnecchia (University of New Mexico School of Law), William M. Sullivan (Senior Scholar The Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching), Judith W. Wegner (University of North Carolina School of Law). (Outline) (podcast)
December 7 & 8, 2007 – “The Legal Study Project” held its first meeting of the ten law schools (CUNY, Dayton, Georgetown, Harvard, Indiana-Bloomington, New Mexico, NYU, Stanford, Southwestern, and Vanderbilt) at the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation on the Stanford campus.
December 6- 7, 2007 – 1st Annual Upstate/Western New York and Beyond Regional Clinical Conference: “Forming a Regional Community to Share and Define Best Practices”, Syracuse University College of Law : The conference explored and critically examined issues raised in the new Carnegie Report, entitled “Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law,” and the Clincial Legal Education Association’s (CLEA) “Best Practices for Legal Education: A Vision and a Road Map.”
November 9, 2007 -The Mercer Law Review hosted a symposium on The Opportunity for Legal Education.
November 2-4, 2007 – Legal Education at the Crossroads, Ideas to Action, Part I: On November 2-4, a conference of 57 reform-minded law school deans, associate deans, clinical teachers, traditional teachers, legal writing teachers, and academic support people discussed how to implement recommendations for improving legal education contained in two recently published books. Educating Lawyers was published by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching, and Best Practices for Legal Education was published by the Clinical Legal Education Association. Both books call on law schools to implement significant, fundamental changes in what they teach and how they teach it.
____
____
Professor Mary Lynch - Editor