Fall 2016 | Page 12

Better Preparing Graduates to Enter the Law Profession: Curriculum revamped at UND School of Law By Bradley Myers On Aug. 16, the University of North Dakota (UND) School of Law welcomed the Class of 2019 to orientation. Like the students that preceded them, these new 1Ls can look forward to many hours of reading long Supreme Court opinions, answering questions when they do not quite know the answer, and generally trying to figure out what it means to “think like a lawyer.” But the Class of 2019 will also be the first class to graduate under a revamped curriculum that will greatly impact the progression and scope of their education. In 2008, the American Bar Association (ABA) Section on Legal Education and Admission to the Bar began a comprehensive review of how it accredits law schools. After six years of review, the Section’s Council adopted significant changes to the Standards and Rules of Procedure for the Approval of Law Schools. The changes can best be described as requiring law schools to focus on what students have learned instead of what they have been taught. The Section considered the scope of the changes so significant that it gave the law schools a couple years to complete the process of implementing them. UND School of Law began the process of revisiting its program of legal education at about the same time. After considerable consideration of the mission of the UND School of Law and changes that have occurred in legal practice, the UND School of Law adopted a Curricular Mission Statement and Working Curricular Strategic Plan in 2012. The Mission Statement makes specific mention of the obligation to help students develop their professional identities and skills, so they will have the proficiency expected of entry-level lawyers. The Curricular Strategic Plan identifies five general Learning Outcomes that form the foundation of legal education. It also lists several specific learning objectives under each of those outcomes. After identifying what each law student should be expected to learn, the faculty began the process of modifying the curriculum to achieve that end. This began by restructuring the first year, adding a Professional Foundations course during the spring semester that introduces students to the concept of professional identity. Most of the UND School of Law’s faculty, and several practicing attorney guest lecturers, take students through what it means to be an attorney across numerous professional milieus in which they might find themselves. In order to make room for the new course, faculty restructured some of the other first-year courses and converted Constitutional Law II into a required course during the fall of the second year. Faculty then moved to consideration of the second and third years, completing the restructuring of those in spring 2016 so the new 12 THE GAVEL curriculum would be ready for this fall’s incoming class. While the faculty kept the new ABA standards in mind, the primary goal of the revised curriculum is to help all graduates achieve competency in each of the identified Learning Outcomes. Traditionally, legal education provided first-year students with a fixed curriculum. After the first year, students had broad latitude to structure their education any way they chose. The only ABA requirements for upper division students were a course in Professional Responsibility and an Intensive Writing Experience that could be part of a course or an independent study. Faculty determined the best way to accomplish its education goals would be to move to a progressive curriculum that provides students with more structure for the second and third years, while still allowing students to design their course of study to coincide with the professional careers they hope to have. In fact, the only new specific course required for every student is Evidence, which virtually every student took already. But faculty did decide they wanted students to take some of the required courses during the second year to prepare them more effectively for what they will do during their third year. Students will now be expected to complete Professional Responsibility and an Intensive Writing Experience, which students used to be able to complete anytime during their second or third years, prior to the end of the second year. They will also be strongly encouraged to take Evidence during their second year, as a foundation for their subsequent academic and employment opportunities. The new third year is designed to take the best advantage of the new ABA Standard requiring all students to complete six credit hours of experiential learning before graduation. Included in the definition of experiential learning are simulation courses, field placements,