Twice each year, Dean Jay Conison provides a comprehensive law school update in the form of a letter to alumni and friends.
Dear Alumni and Friends:
Only a few months have passed since my last letter to you. In that letter, I discussed at some length the economic environment we were facing, the fact that we were weathering the economic challenges well, and the plans and programs that will continue to enable us to thrive. The period since that last letter has seen many important developments in the life and work of the Valparaiso University School of Law. These reflect continued success and even stronger ability to succeed in the years to come. The main developments include:
A strong new class of first-year students has entered and begun their studies. The most impressive characteristic of our new students is that 26% of the new J.D. class consists of students from underrepresented racial and ethnic groups. This is a significant increase from last year, where 15% of the fall 2008 entering class were students from such groups.
The Board of Directors of Valparaiso University has approved construction of the new Lawyering Skills Center—Heritage Hall building. By the time you receive this letter, construction will be under way. Completion of the project is set for fall 2010.
The writing, lecturing, law-reform, and similar activities of our faculty abound, indeed continually increase. Virtually every member of our faculty has an active program of writing, lecturing, and other high-level service.
We have begun to develop law-related educational programs for a wide range of new constituencies, including high school students and executives of nonprofit organizations.
I will share information about all this and more in the following pages.
The New Class
Our new first-year class consists of 191 full-time students and 12 part-time students. As I noted above, 26% are racial and ethnic minorities. In addition, 47% are women; 17 have one or more Master’s degrees; and 32% are 25 years of age or older.
In my spring Alumni Letter, I described my talks with admitted students about our perspective on legal education as education in law as a calling. A substantial number of our new students have already demonstrated a strong commitment to service through prior work and volunteer activity. Eight students are military veterans and five have worked as police officers or for a rescue squad. Others have engaged in political service, for example by working full-time on the last presidential campaign or by serving as interns in the White House or Congress. Some students have worked as child welfare case managers or in other roles in social services; others have taught in public schools. Close to 15% of the entering class have served with the Red Cross, Habitat for Humanity, Amnesty International, or the Special Olympics; as domestic violence and crisis hotline outreach counselors; as mentors to children; or as AmeriCorps community workers.
The overall work experience of these students is impressive. Many already have leadership and management experience in accounting and finance, human resources, pharmacy, real estate, retail, insurance, and sales and marketing. Three students have created their own businesses, including one who founded and ran his own tax and consulting firm for 16 years. Others have worked in occupations ranging from commercial pilot and certified flight instructor to real estate and mortgage services, information technology, farming, and, of course, law, working as interns, paralegals, and clerks.
Our students have graduated from undergraduate and graduate schools in 37 states and 3 foreign countries. Three of our international students attended undergraduate schools in the United States yet are citizens of Canada, Liberia, and Poland. Other students were born and raised in Morocco, Saudi Arabia, Mexico, Poland, Romania, Russia, the Philippines, Moldova, Vietnam, and Kenya. Collectively, our entering students speak at least 10 languages in addition to English; languages spoken by more than one new student include Spanish, Russian, Polish, French, and Arabic.
Finally, our new students represent more than 100 undergraduate institutions across the country, including: Amherst College, Arizona State, Calvin College, Dartmouth College, DePaul University, Gonzaga University, Howard University, Indiana University, Loyola Marymount University, Miami University of Ohio, Purdue University, Rutgers, St. Mary’s, Seton Hall, University of Colorado, University of Florida, University of Illinois, University of New Mexico, University of Michigan, University of North Carolina, University of Texas, University of Washington, University of Wisconsin, Valparaiso University, Villanova, Wabash College, and Willamette.
Lawyering Skills Center—Heritage Hall
The law school’s 2000–05 Strategic Plan, finalized in October 2000, contains the following as one of the law school’s facilities goals:
After nine years of planning and effort, that goal evolved into a more ambitious one:
And, at this moment, that more ambitious goal is being realized.
The new Lawyering Skills Center will have two major parts and will triple the space of the old building. One part of it, the new Heritage Hall, will house our clinics. Thanks to the design skills and creativity of our architects, the new Heritage Hall will look almost exactly like the original, 1875 Heritage Hall, thus meeting our desire to preserve in some way this historical building. Yet, it will be a fully modern facility, providing a highly functional home for our present and future clinical programs. The other major portion of the Lawyering Skills Center will be an architecturally congruent wing that will house rooms and other resources for our extensive skills-training program and for other educational functions of the law school. This wing will include a technologically advanced teaching trial courtroom and several other teaching rooms. The lower level of the building will be dedicated to important infrastructure needs of the entire law school.
Thanks to our construction manager and the leadership of the University’s facilities department, we are working under a rapid but realistic construction timeline. The project is scheduled to be completed in October 2010.
Information on the project and on construction will continue to be available on line at www.valpo.edu/law/heritagehall.
The Work of the Faculty
The faculty are an immensely productive group of individuals, and one of the areas in which they are especially productive is scholarship. Some of the recent and pending publications of our faculty members include:
A convenient way to stay current with our faculty’s scholarship is to periodically check the online VALPARAISO JOURNAL OF LEGAL STUDIES on SSRN, which can be found at http://www.ssrn.com/link/Valparaiso-U-LEG.html. Other articles and papers by our faculty can be found by visiting http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/DisplayAbstractSearch.cfm, and searching by author. These sites provide access to recent publications, works-in-progress, working papers, and some older publications. The articles and papers generally may be downloaded free of charge.
Faculty members have also been highly engaged in oral presentations, including conferences and lectures. Some, but by no means all, of the recent activity in this area includes the following:
Alan White has organized a major interdisciplinary conference to be held at the law school in May 2010. The conference will focus on the empirical analysis of the mortgage crisis data collected by the federal government and other sources. Alan has also participated in many conferences and programs in recent months dealing with mortgage lending and the mortgage crisis. At the Law & Society meeting, Alan presented a paper (with Andrea McCardle from CUNY) concerning their research on the behavior and attitudes of consumers when making mortgage decisions.
There is much more I could report on faculty activity, but there is insufficient space in this letter. I will only note that Alan White’s work on the mortgage crisis has received substantial attention from government officials and the press. Alan testified before a subcommittee of the House Judiciary Committee on July 9, and on July 5 his work was the subject of a column in the New York Times by financial writer Gretchen Morgenstern.
I will close this section of the Letter with news of two recent awards to our faculty. Laura Dooley[16] has received this year’s Valparaiso University Alumni Association’s award for Outstanding Teaching. And Ruth Vance[17] has received the School of Law 2009 Distinguished Faculty Award. Presentations of both awards were made at the University Convocation in August 2009.
Teen Legal and Other Initiatives
In my spring letter, I briefly described our plans to develop educational programs and services for individuals other than those seeking a J.D. or other formal law degree. Over the summer, we moved quickly to implement some of these plans; still others are in the planning stages.
One initiative that has already attracted a great deal of interest is Teen Legal. This is a summer program for high school students that we will begin offering in summer 2010. It will consist of a two-week, residential program at the University and will provide students with an introduction to law (and law school) through classes, hands-on work, and enrichment activities. The substantive focus of the program will be criminal law, but students will also learn about a variety of other areas. Equally important, they will be introduced to fundamental legal skills, including research, critical reasoning, and writing. Mornings will be devoted to classes in which students learn the substantive law and afternoons will be devoted to skills development—to practice in drafting pleadings, interviewing witnesses, and arguing motions. At the conclusion of the program, the students will try a case before parents and friends. The program will include enrichment activities, such as opportunities to observe court proceedings and talk to lawyers and judges, and cultural and recreational activities, such as trips to Chicago and the Indiana Dunes. If you would like further information about this program, please contact Stephanie Medlock,[18] our Director of Professional and Community Studies. Printed and online information about the program will soon be available.
Another initiative is a bit more conventional and may be of practical interest to you. We are developing a series of high-quality continuing legal education programs in areas where we have substantial teaching strength and where we find that attorneys are not otherwise being well served. Thus, we have planned for fall 2009 and spring 2010 a series of programs in legal research and writing. Programs scheduled to date in this area are the following:
Yet another initiative, one intended to reach new constituencies, is a program in conjunction with the College of Business Administration. Leaders of nonprofit organizations often reach their positions either by rising through the ranks of staff members or volunteers, or from the outside as volunteers. Often, they do not have substantial training or experience in management, finance, law, human resources, and other areas needed for effective operation of a business organization. We seek to fill this gap by providing a range of educational opportunities in these areas for nonprofit executives.
Conclusion
Space is always a limitation. Could this letter be longer, I would also write about the work of our student organizations, about upcoming events in the law school, about the work and achievements of various alumni, and about other important projects under way. My file is bulging. Some of this news—especially about events in the law school—you can find on our web site, which I hope you visit periodically.
It is a pleasure to write these letters (even if I can never say enough) and to share with you updates on progress and plans in the law school. I hope you will use this letter as a reminder to keep us informed of news about you and to let us know if you would like to become engaged further in any of our activities, initiatives, or alumni councils or projects. You can easily reach me at jay.conison@valpo.edu.
I look forward to our next opportunity to visit, whether in writing, electronically, or in person.
Very truly yours,
Jay Conison
Dean and Professor
[24] bruce.ching@valpo.edu or 219.465.7971