Each student must meet the experiential education requirements by taking at least six credits of a course or courses called “experiential education.” To meet this requirement, Legal Practice III is called an experiential training course and counts towards all six credit requirements. In addition, an in-house clinical program, a field clinic, the fieldwork component of a clinical clerkship program, and any additional courses designated by the Associate Dean as experiential training courses count towards the six credit requirements. We offer a variety of courses for your professional interest – private practice, public interest, government, litigation, business, maritime, non-legal, educational and more. See Spring 2023 semester courses See Fall 2022 semester courses See Summer 2022 semester courses See Spring 2022 semester courses See Fall 2021 semester courses See 2021 Summer Semester courses See 2021 Summer Semester courses See Spring 2021 semester courses See Spring 2021 semester courses See Fall 2020 semester courses See Fall 2020 semester courses See Summer semester 2020 courses See 2020 summer semester courses See 2020 summer semester courses See fall semester 2020 courses See fall semester 2019 courses See 2019 Summer Semester courses See spring semester 2019 courses RWU Law`s enrichment course is designed to help first-year students develop the essential skills needed to succeed in their first year. These sessions cover topics such as case discussions, outlines, study strategies, and may provide an opportunity to review a formative assessment or gain additional knowledge about teaching areas. All full-time students must take the 1L Enrichment course. Part-time students and MSL students are welcome but are not required to attend. For students starting the Young Women program in the fall of 2019 or later, each student must successfully complete at least four graduate-level courses, designated by the law school as courses for subjects tested by the Law Society. Students can choose the four elective courses required to meet this requirement. In addition to any other courses that the law school may determine, these courses include the following: According to the law school`s grading policy, the average grade in all required first-year courses must be between 2.65 and 2.85. For all required courses after the first year, the cumulative grade point average must be between 2.80 and 3.10. For all other courses, there is no required or recommended GPA. The following is a summary of the courses required for the Young Women diploma.
Or check out the recommended courses in the programs below. In a week! Join us. t.co/xtKCGhVGSJt.co/AmAwy03588. In the era of globalization and “transnationalization”, this track prepares lawyers to tackle issues in the public and private domains of international law. This is a competency-based course that uses the vehicle of an actual criminal procedure protocol to learn the basics of persuasive writing and good oral advocacy. Instead of the shell court nut soup approach, which covers each step of an appeal at a more superficial level, we will focus intensely on specific skills: problem identification and formulation, strategizing for written and oral presentations, advanced research skills and analysis, partisan writing. Throughout the course, there will be opportunities to improve writing skills, learn how to deal with useful and harmful precedents, structure oral arguments, and ask tough questions. Students should be prepared to critique their own writings and practice oral advocacy in class. The graded work takes place throughout the semester; There will be no final exam and no “big” work. This course will help good researchers, writers and lecturers to improve, but also those whose skills are at a basic level will improve.
Our Bristol beachfront campus provides the backdrop for your legal education. Our Providence Experience Campus offers you the experience you are looking for in your third year. LLM students have the opportunity to take a wide range of courses at the Faculty of Law. This course includes legal frameworks that determine what can and cannot be done with and with animals. Animal law is a rapidly evolving and rapidly evolving area of law. It straddles contracts, criminal law, tort, property, constitutional law, wills and trusts, family relations, environmental law, law of evidence, patent law, tax law and other areas. Animal rights are linked to other areas of law, from FOIA petitions to pet trusts to veterinary malpractice. Studying these concepts helps lawyers and law students understand not only the changing attitudes of the law toward animals, but also how the law works and evolves. In this course, we will examine developments in the application of foreign arbitration clauses in maritime treaties since the Supreme Court decided in 1995 in The SKY REEFER to apply them in contracts of carriage. This course focuses on lawsuits for constitutional damages against federal and state officials and governments based on 42 U.S.C.