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American University Washington College of Law


4801 Massachusetts Avenue NW, Suite 507
Washington, DC 20016
Phone: 202.274.4101; Fax: 202.274.4107
E-mail: wcladmit@wcl.american.edu; Website: www.wcl.american.edu

Introduction

American University Washington College of Law (AU WCL) offers an opportunity for the study of law in the center of the nation's legal institutions. The law school is minutes from downtown Washington, yet offers the facilities and ambience of a campus environment in one of the city's most beautiful residential neighborhoods. Founded in 1896 by two women, the law school is national in character. AU WCL offers renowned programs in experiential learning (clinics, externships, trial advocacy), international law, law and government, intellectual property, business, environmental law, health law, and gender. It is committed to the development of the intellectual abilities, professional values, and practical skills required to prepare lawyers to practice in an increasingly complex and transnational world.

Library and Physical Facilities

The John Sherman Myers and Alvina Reckman Myers Law Center houses the Pence Law Library, two courtrooms, classrooms, faculty offices, and administrative offices. The two-story law library is the heart of the complex and seats over 600 students. The entire law school facility has wireless access, and most of the law library seating has wired access as well. The library has more than 600,000 volumes, access to multiple databases, and 14 group-study rooms in addition to individual study carrels and seating. There are a number of research stations and network printing is available to the community. The library collection includes European Community and US government depositories and the Baxter Collection in International Law. Students also have access to the university's library, the Library of Congress, specialized agency libraries, and other area law libraries to which the school is electronically linked. The law school also encompasses more than 12 program offices, several faculty offices, and conference rooms in two neighboring buildings.

Curriculum

The law school offers full- and part-time programs leading to the JD degree, which is awarded after satisfactory completion of 86 credit hours, 32 of which are prescribed. All degree candidates must also fulfill an upper-level writing requirement. While a modified version of the Socratic method is the dominant form of teaching in the first year, faculty increasingly employ such methodologies as role-playing, simulations, and small-group collaborative exercises. The goal is to develop the skills of critical analysis, provide perspectives on the law and lawyering, and deepen understanding of fundamental legal principles. In the Legal Rhetoric Program, basic legal research and writing skills are taught to groups of students by full-time faculty (23 students per section) and practicing attorneys (12 students per section). During the spring semester of the first year, students enroll in an elective first-year course in addition to their required courses. Examples of first-year elective courses are International Law, Introduction to Intellectual Property Law, and Introduction to Public Law. In the second and third years, students elect a course of study drawing from advanced courses, seminars, independent research, externships, and clinical programs. JD students take upper-level courses with LLM students, learning side by side with more than 180 practicing attorneys from around the world. Students are exposed to a variety of teaching approaches by the law school's distinguished full-time tenured and tenure-track faculty and adjunct professors.

Special Programs

While many of the advanced courses are taught in a traditional classroom setting, a variety of other innovative teaching modes are available to enhance research skills and provide professional training.

Admission

Applicants to the law school are admitted based on the strength of their entire academic and related record. The Committee on Admissions gives primary emphasis to the undergraduate record, LSAT scores, and major accomplishments and achievements, whether academic, work-related, or extracurricular. The committee considers the benefits from having racial, ethnic, cultural, economic, and geographic diversity among its students. Admission to the law school is highly selective and operates both a binding Early Decision Option and a modified rolling admission process, so early application is strongly encouraged.

Student Activities

The law school has five established journals and several publications edited and published by students. Journals include Administrative Law Review; American University Law Review; American University Business Law Review; American University International Law Review; and American University Journal of Gender, Social Policy, and the Law. Other publications include Criminal Law Brief, Health Law and Policy, Human Rights Brief, Intellectual Property Brief, Labor & Employment Law Forum, Legislation and Policy Brief, the Modern American, National Security Law Brief, and Sustainable Development Law and Policy. The Moot Court Honor Society sponsors appellate competitions for first-year and upper-level students and prepares students for a number of national and international interschool appellate competitions. The Mock Trial Honor Society sponsors a closing argument competition for first-year students and prepares student teams for national interschool mock trial competitions. There are more than 50 active student organizations, including the Asian-Pacific American Law Students Association, Black Law Students Association, Latino/a Law Students Association, South Asian Law Students Association, Lambda Law Society, International Trade and Investment Law Society, Intellectual Property Law Society, and Law and Government Society.

Career Services

Staffed by seven attorney counselors, the Office of Career and Professional Development provides individual career and professional development counseling to students and alumni on all aspects of the job search process, and sponsors dozens of educational and job-related programs throughout the year. In addition to supporting students who pursue academic year positions in the Washington metropolitan area to advance their substantive legal skills, the office coordinates both on- and off-campus recruitment for summer and postgraduate opportunities, including regional interview programs in cities such as Boston, New York, and Los Angeles.

Applicant Profile

The Committee on Admissions considers a number of factors when evaluating a candidate for admission; therefore we elected not to include a grid based on undergraduate GPA and LSAT scores. Many applicants have similar scores, but each applicant has a unique background of academic, cultural, and professional experiences and achievements. The committee weighs all of these factors when determining a candidate's suitability for admission.