COURSE REGISTRATION INFORMATION:
Summer and Fall Semester 2007
- Introduction
2L Mandatory Advisement Convocation
All Student Registration and Advisement
Convocation Faculty Advisement
Elective
Course Information "Handbook" Questions?
Course Request Timetable
Matters to Consider When Deciding Which Courses to Request: (1)
Degree Requirements and Courses that Are Required (2)
Credit Hours Per Semester (3)
Six Semesters in Residence (4)
Residency for Purposes of Tuition (5)
80 Hours in Courses Requiring Attendance at Regularly Scheduled Law Class
Sessions (6)
To graduate you must satisfy the School's Jurisprudence requirement (7)
To graduate you must satisfy the School's Uniform Commercial Code requirement (8)
To graduate you must satisfy the School's Advanced Torts requirement (9)
To graduate you must satisfy the School's R & W requirement (10)
How to fill out
the Course Request Form (11)
Courses Oversubscribed (12)
Wait list (13)
Financial
Aid
The Next Steps After You Have Received an Approved
Schedule of Courses
First, IN-House Law School Registration
Second, University Registration
E-Consent
Where_do_I_go?
Registration
Holds
Student_Account_Balance
Financial_Aid_and_Scholarships
Instructions_and_Help
Adding and Dropping Classes:
Graduating 3Ls: Special Information
Requirements for a J.D. Degree
Graduation in Two and One Half Years
Interdisciplinary
Courses Taken in Other UMKC Schools
Journal-Staff Participation (Law Review/Urban Lawyer)
Auditing Courses
Bar Examination Information
Disabled Student Services
R&W Information, Standards & Criteria
Standard
Criteria
How Satisfied
Form to Designate the Manner of Satisfying the
requirement
Adjunct Professors
Enrollment in Law 746
The School's Trial and Appellate Advocacy Programs
Introduction
The course
registration process will begin February 27, 2007,
see the Course Request Timetable below.
Students with 56 or more credit hours after the winter 2007 semester will
submit their fall 2007 Course Request Form according to the timetable for
3Ls (blue form); all other students will follow the 2L timetable.
Summer Semester Course Request Forms and timetable will be available at a
later date.
2L Mandatory Advisement Convocation
A mandatory 2L Course Registration Convocation is scheduled for
Monday, February 19, 2007 at noon in the courtroom.
This is only for students who
will be 2L students in the
fall 2007 semester. The convocation is to provide detailed information regarding this year' registration
process, required classes
for graduation, residency requirements, R&W explanations, hours
needed for graduation, credit in lieu of grade option, and
to answer any questions you may have. If you are not able to attend, you will be
required to view the video of this Course Registration Advisement before
you are eligible to enroll and/or participate in enrollment for next
semester.
All Student Registration and Advisement Convocation
There will also be a Student Registration and Advisement Convocation on
Friday, February 23, 2007
at noon in the Student Lounge. Faculty will be present to discuss course offerings and answer questions
about courses desirable for different career goals. .
Faculty Advisement
Before
students submit their Course Request Form, they must show the administration
that they have visited with their faculty advisors to discuss career goals,
course selection, etc. Proof that this has occurred is shown by having their faculty
advisors sign or initial their Course Request Form. Accordingly, a student's
form will not be accepted that does not contain an advisor's signature on it
signifying advisement has occurred. Ordinarily, a student's faculty advisor is
his or her Inn advisor. If you are unsure who your Inn advisor is, please
contact Jean Klosterman in the Administrative Suite; email:
klostermanj@umkc.edu.
Elective Course
Information "Handbook"
The "handbook" arranged by
catalog number, contains specific
information about elective courses offered during the summer and fall 2007
semesters, including prerequisites, method of grading, course summary,
books used and relevance of the course for career purposes. It is
designed to assist students in course selection and may be found at: http://www1.law.umkc.edu/academic/courses.htm
Questions?
We know that questions often arise regarding meeting degree requirements,
including meeting residency and research and writing requirements. Feel free to e-mail Dean Berman
and/or Carol Pegues for answers to questions you may have and also to
let them know of any difficulties you may be having with the
registration process. Their
email addresses are: bermanj@umkc.edu;
peguesc@umkc.edu.
Course Request Timetable
| 3Ls completed Course Request forms due in Administrative
Suite. |
Tuesday, Feb. 27 (By 12:00 Noon) |
| 3Ls "approved" or "disapproved" Course Request forms returned to students'
mailbox. |
Friday, March 2 (After
3:00 pm) |
| 3Ls revised Course Request forms due in Administrative
Suite for second and final approval. |
Monday, March 5 (By 12:00 Noon) |
| 3Ls revised Course Request forms returned to students'
mailboxes. |
Wednesday, March 7 (After
3:00 pm) |
| 2Ls completed Course Request forms due in Administrative
Suite. |
Wednesday, March 7 (By 12:00 Noon) |
| 2Ls "approved" or "disapproved" Course Request forms returned to students'
mailbox. |
Monday, March 12 (After
3:00 pm) |
| 2Ls revised Course Request forms due in Administrative
Suite for second and final approval. |
Wednesday, March 14 (By 12:00 Noon) |
| 2Ls revised Course Request forms returned to students'
mailboxes. |
Friday, March 16 (After
3:00 pm) |
Matters to Consider When Deciding Which Courses to Request:
(1) Degree Requirements and Courses that
Are Required
See these topics covered below. Click on Requirements for a J.D. Degree
and Required Courses.
2) Credit Hours Per Semester
A full-time student must take at least 13 credit hours per semester
(except during the last semester) and may not take more than 16 credit
hours per semester, except with the permission of the Associate Dean.
(3) Six Semesters in Residence
A student must complete six semesters "in residence." This
means that a student must carry at least 10 credit hours each semester
in courses requiring attendance at regularly scheduled class sessions.
For residency purposes, two UMKC summer sessions may count together to
form one residency semester (except with respect to our summer abroad
courses). Thus, students taking five regular semesters and two summer
sessions at the School totaling at least ten residency hours may
graduate in 2 1/2 years. A student desiring to attend a summer abroad program offered by another
school should check with Associate Dean Berman to see if the program may
count as 1/2 of a residence semester.
The fact that a course is not a graded one (e.g., Trial Advocacy I &
II) does not mean that it is a non-residency course. It is a residency
course if there are regularly scheduled class sessions for it at the law
school. If you are in doubt as to whether a course meets the
requirement, see Questions? above.
Courses that carry partial residence credit toward
minimum of 10 (except in last semester when they count in full toward
the 10):
| Law 8656 Public Defender Trials Clinic |
3 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8656P Jackson County Prosecutor's Clinic |
3 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8705 Trial Advocacy III |
2 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8745 Law Review |
1 hr residency per semester on staff |
| Law 8745R Law Review Board |
1 hr residency each semester on Board |
| Law 8748 Appellate Advocacy III |
2 hr credit/ 1hr residency |
| Law 8750 Urban Lawyer |
1 hr residency each year on staff |
| Law 8750B Urban Lawyer Board |
1 hr residency each semester on Board |
No residency credit ever toward minimum of 10:
| Law 8747 |
Appellate Advocacy II |
| Law 8746 |
Legal Research |
| Law 8746R |
Independent Study |
| Law 8800 |
Legal Research Thesis |
Any course taken in another part of the university (unless cross listed)
Courses that are considered residence courses during a student's last semester:
All for credit clinics, competitions & journal participation
Full residency credit for in-house clinics:
| Law 8834R |
Tax Clinic |
| Law 8752S |
Child & Family Services Clinic |
| Law 8757R |
Entrepreneurial Law and Practice Clinic |
(4) Residency for Purposes of Tuition
The residency requirement, provided above, should not be confused with the
issue of whether or not someone is a resident of Missouri for purposes
of tuition and fees. Information concerning residency for purposes of
tuition and fees may be obtained from the UMKC Cashier's Office.
(5) At Least 80 Hours in Courses
at Regularly Scheduled Class Sessions
Only courses requiring attendance at regularly scheduled class sessions at the law
school (or at other schools or in summer abroad programs, in the case of
a student visiting at another school or attending a summer abroad
program) may meet this requirement. Thus, credit for clinics, research
& writing, independent study, courses taken in other units of the
university (unless cross- listed) journal participation and competitions
do not count toward the 80 hours. A student desiring to attend a summer
abroad program offered by another school should check with Dean Berman
to see if the number of class sessions in the program meet the
requirements for the program's courses to count toward the 80
hours.
The only exceptions are:
| Law 8638R Entrepreneurial Lawyering: Solo/Small Firm Practice |
full residence credit |
| Law 8656 Public Defender Trials Clinic |
3 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8656P Jackson County Prosecutor's Clinic |
3 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8705 Trial Advocacy III |
2 hr credit/ 1 hr residency |
| Law 8745 Law Review |
1 hr residency per semester on staff |
| Law 8745R Law Review Board |
1 hr residency each semester on Board |
| Law 8748 Appellate Advocacy III |
2 hr credit/ 1hr residency |
| Law 8750 Urban Lawyer |
1 hr residency each year on staff |
| Law 8750B Urban Lawyer Board |
1 hr residency each semester on Board |
| Law 8752S Child & Family Services Clinic |
full residency credit |
| Law 8757R Entrepreneurial Law & Practice Clinic |
full residency credit |
| Law 8834R Tax Clinic |
full residency credit |
JD/MBA students & JD/MPA students have to have 76 residency hours,
not 80.
6) In order to graduate you must take at least one course as a 2L or 3L that meets
the School's Jurisprudence requirement
On the schedule, courses that meet the
Jurisprudence requirement will have "J" in the "Notes" section of the listing of
courses.
(7)
In order to graduate you must satisfy the School's Uniform Commercial Code requirement
All students must take at least one course designated as one that satisfies
this requirement. The courses meeting this requirement are Commercial
Transactions, Sales & Leasing, and Secured Transactions. "UCC"
appears in the "Notes" section of the schedule indicating that
a course meets the requirement.
(8)
In order to graduate you must satisfy the School's Advanced Torts requirement
All students must take at least one course designated as one that satisfies
this requirement. "AdvT" appears in the "Notes"
section of the schedule indicating that a course meets the requirement.
A 1L
may, but is not required, to take the course during the winter semester
of his or her first year. A student may take more than one Advanced
Torts course.
(9)
In order to graduate you must satisfy the School's R & W requirement
This requires students to have a rigorous writing experience evidencing legal
analysis resulting in a paper of professional quality. For more
information about the requirement, including the criteria for satisfying
it and the methods that may be used, please click on R&W
Information, Standards & Criteria
(10) How
to fill out the Course Request Form
You may obtain a Course Request Form from the Administrative Suite. The yellow
Course Request Form is for 1Ls & 2Ls, and the blue Course Request Form is for
3Ls. For Summer School, the form will be pink for all
students taking summer classes.
First,
complete the top portion, providing name, address, etc. Be sure to
indicate when you plan to graduate (e.g., Summer '07, December '07, May
'08, etc.) and
the number of credit hours that you will
have completed at the end of the Winter '07 semester, so that when your sheet is reviewed
we can be sure that what you believe your total cumulative credit hours is,
is accurate.
Second,
list each course requested, starting with the lowest to the highest
course number requested (e.g., list Law 8731 before Law
8754, etc.). The
first box for each course ("apvd") is for completion by the
administrative office, so leave that box blank.
Be
sure to provide the class number for each course in the Class# box.
Class numbers for Law 8746 (R&W) and
Law 8746R (Independent Study) of the individual faculty members overseeing the
R&Ws and independent research/study projects. The class numbers
are listed at http://www1.law.umkc.edu/academic/courses.htm.
Remember, before the Course Request Form will
be accepted by Carol Pegues, the
form must be signed or initialed by your faculty advisor. See
Faculty
Advisement, above.
When
you receive a copy of the form back, it will be checked if the course is
approved for you to take, otherwise the course will be lined through. Since some courses will be
oversubscribed (see
Courses Oversubscribed, below), it is important that you
indicate how important the course or section of a course is for you to
take in your mind. Show this by placing a number in the box labeled
"Pref". A "1" means it is the course you most want to take,
a "2" the next in importance, etc. Please do not leave the
space blank or it will be assumed that you have no preference. Likewise,
do not place a "1" for every course, for that will indicate
that you have no ranked preferences among the courses. Be sure to
also list your alternate selections, since some of the courses you
request may be oversubscribed. Also, indicate for the alternates which
course each is an alternate for--do that in the box labeled "For."
Thus if you request Law 8765 and want Law 8867 to be an
alternate choice for that course, indicate in the "For" box, "8765."
A
copy of your request form will be returned to you--see Course
Request Timetable, above. It will either indicate that the
courses are approved or will indicate that a resubmission is required.
The comment section will explain why a resubmission is required if it is
not obvious from the changes made to your request on the form. In some
cases, an administrative change will be made on the form, such as moving
a 2L to a different section of a required course.
(11) Courses Oversubscribed
When
requesting a course, consider the possibility that the course may be
oversubscribed, i.e. more students may request the course than will be
approved to enroll in it (due to number of seats, limited enrollment
course, etc.) In such an event, enrollment preference will be given to
third year students. In the event there is more than one section of a
course, such preference will only be in regard to course enrollment, not
section enrollment. Where insufficient seats are available for all
members of a class (second year or third year) desiring to take that
course, students will be selected for enrollment based upon priority
requests and, where necessary, based on random assignment.
(12) Wait list.
A
list of closed courses will be posted on the web after they close and a
waiting list process will begin for each closed class. Students on the
wait list will be contacted by telephone and/or email as seats become
available in the order in which the wait list request was made, with
priority given to 3L students. A wait list request form may be obtained
from Marcia Pinkman in the Administrative Suite.
(13) Financial Aid
The
number of credit hours taken per semester often impacts the eligibility
for financial aid. Be sure to check with the Student Financial Aid
Office in regard to such eligibility.
The Next Steps After You Have Received
an Approved Schedule of Courses
First, IN-House Law School Registration
Once your schedule has been approved (including all final revisions),
you will need to obtain and complete a Schedule of Classes card from the
Administrative Suite. Please list the courses you have been approved to
take in catalog number numerical order (with the lowest catalog number
listed first, i.e. Law 8741 before Law 8765, etc.). No course should be
listed that has not been approved for you to enroll in by Dean Berman
Please print clearly in ink (not red ink).
Bring your completed Schedule of Class card to Carol Pegues. Once your
card has been reviewed and approved by Ms Pegues, she will release you
to enroll in the courses. Then, please proceed to the next step,
University Registration.
Second, University Registration
Registration may be done using the campus web based Pathway system. You may log-in to the Pathway system,
click here to access it anytime, day or night. You will log-in with your single sign-on (SSO) and password.
Your single sign-on (SSO) is the part of your UMKC email before the @ sign. You will use the same password
that you use for your UMKC email, Blackboard, or to log-on to computers in the computer labs on campus.
E-Consent
When you first log-on to
Pathway, you must provide your consent to do business with UMKC online. If you choose not to
provide your consent, you will have to do all business with UMKC in person at the Administrative Center during regular
business hours. Once you have decided whether or not to grant consent, you will be re-directed to the sign-on page and you must
log-on again to access your information.
Where do I go?
When you log-in to
Pathway after providing E-Consent, you will want to click on Self Service and then Student Center.
Everything you need is accessible from this one centralized location. You can update your address and phone and view
and pay your current bill in Pathway now. Later this month you will be able to use Pathway to register for classes.
Registration
Registration for law students occurs April 16th – through May 25th. After May 25th you will not be able to enroll without
seeing Carol A. Pegues, filling out an add form and registering in person (bringing the add form to the Administrative Building,
52nd & Oak). Please see your exact Pathway system appointment registration time listed below. “Appointment times” simply refers
to the date/time after which you may register for your courses.
Your appointment times are:
Summer 2007: {date}
Fall 2007: {date}
This is the earliest day and time you can register for classes, registration will continue until classes begin.
Open registration for all continuing and new students begins April 30. You can also view your registration start
times in Pathway on the right-hand side of the Student Center.
Remember: You should only enroll in the courses that have been approved by Dean Berman.
Holds
You can view any holds on your student account on the right-hand side of the Student Center. You may need to have these holds
removed before you can register for classes. If advising is required for you, you will have an academic advising hold.
Your advisor can remove this hold, but make sure to meet with your advisor prior to your registration start time.
Student Account Balance
The balance on your student account has been converted from the old STAR system to the new
Pathway system.
If you have questions about your balance, contact the Cashiers office at 816-235-1365 or
cashiers@umkc.edu.
If you have a zero balance, no information will be available in the Finances section at this time.
Financial Aid and Scholarships
Information regarding required financial aid documents is currently showing in the “To Do” area of self-service.
You will receive notification in the near future once financial aid award information is available in self service.
In addition, due to the conversion to Pathway, crediting of Fall 2006 and Winter 2007 financial aid to student accounts
has been temporarily suspended and is scheduled to resume the week of April 16, 2007.
Instructions and Help
There are interactive tutorials and printable, step-by-step instructions for several of the main functions in Pathway on the
Registrar’s office web site at
www.umkc.edu/registrar/pathway.asp. If you have trouble logging-on to Pathway,
contact the Call Center at 816-235-2000 or
CallCenter@umkc.edu.
Registering
for a graded course on a Credit/in Lieu of Grade basis must be done in
person
After
completion of the first year, a student may take one elective course
ordinarily graded (except a 4-credit-hour class) on an ungraded basis.
For a "pass" to be posted on the
student's record, work done for the course must be equivalent to a grade
of C- or better; otherwise, the actual grade received will be posted. A student must make this
election before the beginning of the semester by filling out an
additional form that can be picked up in the administrative suite. You must
hand carry this completed form to the campus registration and
records office at the Administrative Center, since the Credit in Lieu of
Grade Option must be exercised in person. The Credit in Lieu of Grade
Option form must be filed with the campus registration office no
later than Friday, May 11 for the summer session
'07 and Friday, August 17th for the fall session '07 and the elected option may not be revoked
thereafter. NO EXCEPTIONS!
Adding and Dropping Classes:
Drop/adds
may be requested by completing a drop/add form available from Carol
Pegues in the administrative suite. The form will be given to Dean
Berman for approval or disapproval and returned to the student. In
general, a course may not be added after the class has met for one week.
Remember, adding or dropping a course via the web or telephone
registration without law school approval will not be effective and you
will be administratively removed from any course you have not been
approved to enroll in and will be returned to any course you do not have
permission to drop.
Graduating 3Ls: Special Information
Students planning to graduate in July or December 2007
and to take the July Bar Examination, (Kansas or Missouri) should please
note:
1. You need to fill out Application For Graduation form." If you plan on being a
summer 2006 graduate, the application needs to be filed by
Friday, June 15, 2007. If you plan on being a December 2006
graduate, the application needs to be filed by
Monday, September 17, 2007. The website for this form is
http://www.umkc.edu/registrar/forms.html. This is a fixed deadline and cannot be waived.
2. The
University will not permit the Law School to certify your graduation or
release your diploma to the Kansas or Missouri bar authorities if you
have a balance due on your University account, e.g., for parking fines,
outstanding fee balances, etc.
3. Your
Research & Writing (R & W) paper must be approved by your
supervising faculty member, and a signed R&W completion form turned
in to Carol A. Pegues, no later than August 3,
2007 for summer 2007 graduates and January 7, 2008 for December 2008
graduates (no exceptions). Most faculty members do not
have time to review R & W papers either during or after the exam
period (because of grading), so you should plan on submitting your final
draft before the last day of class, if you want to meet the
certification deadline. The faculty member, of course, may provide for
the exact date when the final draft is due, which may be much earlier.
4. Missouri Bar Examination The Missouri
Board of Law Examiners requires that you submit an official
transcript as proof that the J.D. degree has been conferred. It is
due on July 1 for the July examination and February 1 for the February
examination. In those few cases where a student will complete degree
requirements prior to the bar exam but the degree will not be conferred
until after the bar exam, the board will need a letter from the School
verifying that the student has met all of the degree requirements. To be
sure that receipt of the official transcript is timely, be sure
to request a transcript prior to graduation from the UMKC Registrar's
Office with the instruction that it be sent to the office of the
Missouri Board of Law Examiners immediately after the degree is awarded.
Kansas Bar Examination To take the
Kansas Bar examination, the School must certify that you have completed
all degree requirements by January 15, 2008 for the February bar
examination and June 15, 2008 for the July 2008 bar examination. The
deadline is final.
5. Faculty CANNOT
extend the graduation/bar certification deadlines.
6. R&W If
you haven’t done so already, you must file a completed R&W
Record’s Office Form (gold form) with the School’s Record’s Office
(Carol A. Pegues) prior to the start of the fall
semester. The
form indicates how you intend to satisfy the R&W requirement and
contains dates when aspects of the paper are due. Both the student and the
supervising professor must sign it.
The form may be obtained from Carol A. Pegues in the
Administration Suite. For more information, click on (9)In order to graduate you must
satisfy the School's R & W requirement
May 2008 graduates please note: If
you are planning to complete your R&W requirement through independent
study or in conjunction with a course or seminar
you must have a designated R&W faculty member supervisor no later than
the start of the fall 2007 semester. Therefore, if you are
planning to graduate in May 2008, it would be best to obtain a faculty
supervisor before the end of this semester since many of the faculty
will not be in residence this summer to discuss the matter with.
Requirements for a J.D. Degree
The requirements for the J.D. degree:
1. Completion
of 91 credit hours, 80 of which must be classroom credits (76 if a
JD/MBA or JD/MPA student), within 5 years.
2. A cumulative grade-point average of at least 2.0
3. Six semesters in residence carrying
not less than 10 classroom credit hours each semester, i.e, in courses
requiring attendance at regularly scheduled class sessions in the law
school. (see (3)
Six Semesters in Residence, above)
4. Completion of all required courses (see Required Courses,
below);
5. Fulfilling
the school's research and writing requirement. This requires students to
have a rigorous writing experience evidencing legal analysis resulting
in a paper of professional quality.
6. Completion
of the school's advanced torts requirement. This requires students to
take at least one 3-hour course from a designated list of advanced torts
courses offerings;
7. Completion of the school's jurisprudential requirement. This
requires students to take at least one course from a particular group of
jurisprudential elective course offerings;
8. Regular
and punctual class attendance.
Required Courses
First Year Required Courses:
All
students must complete the following required courses during the first year:
Full-Time Program
| Fall Semester |
Credit Hours |
| Contracts I |
3 |
| Criminal Law |
3 |
| Intro. to Law and Lawyering Processes I |
3 |
| Property I |
3 |
| Torts |
3 |
| TOTAL |
15 |
| Winter Semester |
Credit Hours |
| Contracts II |
3 |
| Constitutional Law I |
3 |
| Intro. to Law and Lawyering Processes II |
2-3 |
| Property II |
3 |
| Civil Procedure I |
3 |
| TOTAL |
14-15 |
Part-Time (Flex) Students
Flex students must take three of the required
courses, including Introduction to Law and Lawyering Processes, in their
first year. The remaining courses must be completed in their second year
of study.
Other Required Courses
Students must complete the following courses as a condition of graduation:
Required to be Taken During the Summer Preceding or Fall of Second Year
| Course |
Credit Hours |
| Business Organizations |
4 |
| Civil Procedure II |
2 |
| Federal Taxation |
3 |
Required to be Taken During the Summer Preceding or Winter of Second Year
| Course |
Credit Hours |
| Evidence |
3 |
Required to be Taken During the Second or Third Year:
| Course |
Credit Hours |
| Criminal Procedure I |
3 |
| Commercial Transactions, Sales & Leasing or Secured Transactions |
3 |
| Professional Responsibility |
2 |
| A course that fulfills the Schools Jurisprudence requirement |
1-3 |
Required to be Taken at any Time Prior to Graduation and May be Taken During the Second
Semester of the First Year:
A course that fulfills the School's Advanced Torts requirement. (3 cr hrs)
Completion of the School's R&W requirement (See R&W
Information, Standards & Criteria, below)
Other Information
Graduation in Two and One Half Years
Despite
the six semesters in residence requirement, provided above, students may
graduate in two and one half years. To do so requires attending at least two UMKC summer sessions
(not including the School's two summer abroad programs, which, although
they may count toward the
91 hours needed to graduate and the 80 hour residency rule can not be
used for this purpose) in order to accumulate enough credit hours to
meet the graduation credit hour requirement. Each summer session may be
considered half a semester for purposes of the residency requirement. Thus, at least 10 credit hours
in courses requiring attendance at regularly scheduled class sessions in
the law school must be taken in two summer sessions to satisfy the
residency requirement. Students
desiring a lighter load in their sixth semester may combine the last
semester with a previous summer semester to accumulate the required ten
"in residence" hours.
Interdisciplinary Courses Taken in Other UMKC Schools
A student may enroll in up to 10 hours of courses in other UMKC schools
and colleges and apply such hours toward the J.D. degree. The course(s) must be an appropriate upper‑level (500
or above) interdisciplinary course. The Associate Dean must approve the course (in advance of
enrollment) as an appropriate one for law credit. A request to enroll in such
course (indicating why you believe the course is appropriate for law
school credit and your career objectives) must provided by email to the
Associate Dean during the course request process. Grades earned in such courses will not count in your law
school GPA (even though a grade will appear on your official UMKC
transcript), nor will the credits count toward the residency
requirements, unless the course is cross-listed.
Journal-Staff Participation (Law
Review/Urban Lawyer)
Students depending on
journal-staff participation credit hours to meet the credit hour
graduation requirement should indicate on their course request sheet for
each semester the number of credits they will be receiving for each such
participation. Students are
responsible for making certain that at the appropriate time the Records
Office is advised of the credits for journal staff participation. Students seeking credit for such
participation are specifically directed to two faculty policies
impacting the receipt of credit for such participation.
A student may NOT serve concurrently as an editor of the Law Review and Urban Lawyer
Two students may NOT hold the same editorship on a journal (except for Urban Lawyer Assistant Editors).
Auditing Courses
Law students may audit a course only with the written approval of the
professor offering the course. The
approval must be transmitted by email to the associate dean. Regular and
punctual attendance is required in audited courses. An audited course may not
thereafter be taken for credit. An Audit course WILL NOT count toward
the 91 hour degree requirement.
Bar Examination Information
Click on http://www1.law.umkc.edu/academic/barexam.htm,
for detailed information about the Missouri and Kansas bar examinations, including past Missouri Bar Examination questions.
Disabled Student Services
UMKC
endeavors to make all activities, programs and services accessible to
students with disabilities. A Coordinator for Disabled Student Services is available to
advise students and arrange for reasonable accommodations concerning all
aspects of campus life. It
is important that students contact the Coordinator at least six weeks
prior to the beginning of classes to arrange for providing appropriate
documentation and the prescribing of reasonable accommodations in the
classroom. For information
call (816) 235-5696. Speech
and hearing impaired use Relay Missouri, 1-800-735-2966 (TT) or
1-800-735-2466 (Voice.)
THE
BOARD OF CURATORS AND THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI-KANSAS CITY ARE
COMMITTED TO THE POLICY THAT THERE SHALL BE NO DISCRIMINATION ON THE
BASIS OF RACE, COLOR, RELIGION, SEX, SEXUAL ORIENTATION, AGE, NATIONAL
ORIGIN, DISABILITY, OR VIETNAM ERA VETERAN STATUS. THIS POLICY PERTAINS TO
EDUCATIONAL PROGRAMS, ADMISSIONS, ACTIVITIES AND EMPLOYMENT PRACTICES. THE VICE PROVOST FOR AFFIRMATIVE ACTION, LOCATED IN ROOM 354
ADMINISTRATIVE CENTER (5115 OAK), IS RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL RELEVANT
PROGRAMS AND MAY BE CONTACTED AT (816) 235-1323, 235-2721. SPEECH AND
HEARING IMPAIRED USE. RELAY
MISSOURI: 1-800-735-2966 (TT) OR 1-800-735-2466 (VOICE).
R&W Information, Standards & Criteria
Standard: Each law student shall have a rigorous writing experience evidencing
legal analysis resulting in a paper of professional quality.
Criteria: The student's written work should meet the following criteria:
1. Analysis: Does the piece
reflect an informed understanding of the doctrines and theories used? Has the author critically
appraised the case(s), doctrines, statues or ideas developed? Does the piece include a thorough presentation of the
relevant available resources? Does
the piece show creativity and original work? Is the analysis thorough, well
written and organized?
2. Authority: Are the
assertions supported? Is
the support more than a single source? Does the authority come from a variety of sources? Is interdisciplinary support
offered when appropriate? Does
the student over-rely on a single source?
3. Format: The
research and writing requirement is intended to focus on legal analysis. That analysis can come in a
variety of forms from an interoffice memorandum, an advocacy brief, or a
scholarly article. While
that analysis underlies legal drafting, drafting legal documents would
not meet the criteria. A piece satisfying the research and writing requirement
should be approximately thirty (30) pages, evidencing sufficient use of
authority and encompassing multiple drafts.
How Satisfied:
The requirement may be satisfied by writing one of the following:
Seminar Paper: Whether
a seminar paper meets the R&W requirement is a decision for the law
professor teaching the course/seminar. If the R&W requirement is met by the seminar paper as
required by the professor, the student does not also register in Law 8746
Legal Research (2 hrs). If
the seminar paper meets the R&W requirement only if the paper is
longer than that required for the seminar itself, than the student must
also enroll in Law 8746 Legal Research (2 hrs.).
Elective Course Paper:
Whether a paper in an elective course meets the R&W requirement is a
decision for the law professor teaching the course/seminar. If the
R&W requirement is met by the course paper as required by the
professor, the student does not also register in Law 8746 Legal Research
(2 hrs.). If the course paper meets the R&W requirement only
if the paper is longer than that required for the course itself, than
the student must also enroll in Law 8746 Legal Research (2 hrs.).
Independent Study Paper:
If
the R&W is to be satisfied in this way, the student must register in
Law 8746 Legal Research (2 hrs.). The paper can not be on a topic
encompassed within the course description of an available seminar or
elective course and a designated professor must agree in writing to
supervise the paper and to certify to its fulfilling the R&W
requirement.
Note: All students planning to complete
their R&W requirement through Independent Study or in conjunction with a course
or seminar, must obtain a designated faculty supervisor no later than the start
of the semester before their final semester. Thus, a May graduate should
do so prior to the start of the Fall semester.
Law Review Comment/Urban Lawyer Annotation/Matrimonial Law Journal Project:
Can be used to satisfy the R&W requirement, provided a faculty
member supervises the writing and certifies to the Records Office that
the work meets the R&W requirement. Although a student may receive additional academic credit for
satisfying the R&W requirement with Urban Lawyer written work (in
addition to any staff/editor hours received), neither a Law Review Note
or Comment nor a Matrimonial Law Journal Project may be so used to
obtain additional academic credit hours. Students desiring to obtain two R&W credit hours for faculty
supervised and certified Urban Lawyer written work should enroll in Law
746 Legal Research (2 hrs.).
Appellate Advocacy III or National Team Brief:
Satisfactory
completion of Appellate Advocacy III and rewriting the brief so that it
is of professional quality; or satisfactory completion of Appellate
Advocacy IV and writing an Appellate Advocacy IV brief of professional
quality. The Appellate Advocacy professor must certify to the Records
Office that the student has fulfilled the R&W requirement in this
manner. If the requirement
is to be satisfied in this way, the student will not register in Law 8746
Legal Research (and will not receive additional credit), but need only
be enrolled in the Appellate Advocacy course.
A brief used in other
competitions, including the Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition,
the Giles Sutherland Rich Moot Court Competition and the Jessup
International Law Moot Court Competition, may be used to satisfy the
criteria if a faculty member certifies to the Records Office that the
student has fulfilled the requirement in this manner. Students desiring to obtain two
R&W credit hours for writing such a brief should enroll in Law 8746
Legal Research (2 hrs.).
Form to Designate the Manner of Satisfying the
requirement
All students planning to complete their R&W requirement through
independent study or in conjunction with a course or seminar,
must have a designated faculty supervisor no later than the start of the
semester before their final semester. In addition, all students must
identify the method by which they propose to satisfy their R&W requirement
before the start of their last semester of law school. Please pick up the gold form in the Records Office for this
purpose. It provides the
various options available to fulfill the requirements and asks for dates
when aspects of the paper must be completed. The form must be completed and
filed as soon as possible after the professor agrees to oversee the
R&W project. Upon completion of the R&W paper, the supervising faculty
shall submit to the Records Office a copy of the paper (in written or
electronic format) and the signed approval form. The Records Office will
retain the signed approval forms and the R&W papers.
Adjunct Professors
While adjunct professors may supervise an R&W paper, they may not do so
alone. A regular faculty member must also be willing to co-supervise
and to oversee the proper performance and completion of the paper, and
to certify that the paper fulfills the requirement. The name of the co-supervising
faculty member must be provided to the Records Office at the time of
registration.
Enrollment in Law 8746
All students who enroll in Law 8746 (R&W Requirement) must provide the
class number of the faculty member supervising the research on the
course request sheet. The Law 8746 class numbers for the
faculty are listed at http://www1.law.umkc.edu/academic/courses.htm
The School's Trial and Appellate Advocacy Programs
There has been much interest regarding our trial and appellate advocacy
programs. Because these are
areas in which we excel and in which there is traditionally strong
student interest, we would like to explain how these programs work so
that you can make scheduling decisions.
Introduction:
Both appellate
and trial advocacy are taught in sequenced courses. The Appellate Advocacy sequence begins first. In fact, you have
already begun
that sequence, because Introduction to Law II (in which you write a
brief and do an appellate argument) serves as Appellate Advocacy I. Therefore, if you are interested in continuing to develop
appellate advocacy skills and, perhaps, participating in our competitive
program, you should enroll in the Fall in Appellate Advocacy II. The Trial Advocacy sequence
begins in the Winter semester of the second year and is a prerequisite
for participation in the trial advocacy competitions.
Appellate Advocacy Sequence
Appellate
Advocacy II is a one-credit course. It meets for class sessions during the first half of the semester
and culminates in student presentation of oral arguments. The course
introduces students to a unique Missouri appellate process and students
are required to write Points Relied On and a Summary of Argument (3 page
total) on each side of a case set in the Missouri Supreme Court. They then argue the case twice
(once on each side) in front of panels of lawyers. The arguments take place in the
Jackson County Courthouse two Saturdays in October or early November. The top 16 students in Appellate
Advocacy II will be invited to participate in the Ellison Moot Court
Competition (Appellate Advocacy III) in the Winter Semester. That course involves a problem
set in the United States Supreme Court and requires that students write
a full brief and argue before actual judges one Saturday in March or
early April at the federal courthouse. Appellate Advocacy III is a two-hour course. Awards are given for the Top
Oralist, Best Brief and Best Advocate Overall. In addition, the top six
students from Appellate Advocacy III are chosen to be members of the
National Moot Court Team (and to enroll in Appellate Advocacy IV, a one
credit course) during the Fall of their third year. All participants in Appellate
Advocacy III are invited and expected to join the Moot Court Board
Trial Advocacy Sequence
Trial
Advocacy begins in the Winter of the second year. Students enroll in Trial Advocacy I (2 credit hour course),
which involves one weekly large class presentation/demonstration and one
small group session in which the skills learned are practiced. Dean Berman oversees the course and local litigators and
trial judges conduct the assessments. The class culminates in trials held at the courthouse in April. Any student who
takes Trial Advocacy I and desires to do so
may then enroll in Trial Advocacy II, which focuses more on strategy
development and skill refinement, in the Fall of the third year. Certain "accelerated" sections of
Trial Advocacy II may only be
enrolled in by students who have excelled in Trial Advocacy I who are
invited to enroll in those sections. Trial Advocacy II meets once per week and receives two credits. Full trials
are conducted at the
end of the semester. Members
of the National Trial Teams are selected from those participating in
the accelerated sections of Trial Advocacy II. They
enroll in Trial Advocacy III and compete in regional and national trial
competitions during the Winter semester of the third year.
Summation
Both
our appellate and trial advocacy programs help prepare students to
practice law. Students who
complete our Advocacy programs should be able to pick up a file of a
case being litigated, organize it and present it before a court and a
jury in a persuasive way. Similarly,
if unsuccessful in the trial of a case, they will be prepared to present
the case properly and persuasively before an appellate court.
Both our trial and appellate programs have been
successful in recent years in producing teams that have been very
competitive at Regional and National competitions. Additionally, students who
participate on our National Moot Court and Trial Teams receive the H.
Michael Coburn Advocacy Scholarships in the semester in which they
compete. There are
additional opportunities for participation in interschool moot court
competition, including the Jessup International Moot Court Competition,
Frederick Douglass Moot Court (sponsored by National BLSA), and other
specialized moot court competitions. Students interested in these programs are strongly encouraged to
take Appellate Advocacy II in the Fall.
Whether
you have a desire to be a trial or appellate advocate, compete for your
school, or merely want to overcome the fear of speaking in front of
others, these courses are for you.
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