Villanova University School of Law

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Villanova University School of Law
File:Vls logo.gif
Type Private
Established 1953
Affiliation Roman Catholic (Augustinian)
Dean John Gotanda
Location , ,
Website Villanova Law Website

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Villanova University School of Law is the law school of Villanova University, the oldest and largest Catholic University in Pennsylvania. Villanova was founded 150 years ago by the Augustinians, a prominent Roman Catholic teaching order. The University is located 25 minutes from Center City Philadelphia in the Main Line suburb of Villanova.

Opened in 1953, the School of Law is approved by the American Bar Association (ABA) and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS). Approximately 720 students study full-time in the J.D. program which offers more than 100 offerings including foundation courses, specialty offerings, drafting courses, clinical experiences, seminars, simulation courses and externships. The faculty /student ratio is 17:1.[1]

In November 2007, the Villanova School of Law began construction on a new building to house classrooms, offices, and research facilities.[2] The building was completed in August 2009. The new facility was built according to LEED standards and incorporate a park like setting with a walking trail.[3]

Degrees awarded

Juris Doctor (JD)

Villanova offers a legal education designed to teach the rules of law and their application; to demonstrate how lawyers analyze legal issues and express arguments and conclusions; to inculcate the skills of the counselor, advocate, and decision maker; and to explore the ethical and moral dimensions of law practice and professional conduct.[citation needed]

Joint JD/MBA program

The Villanova University School of Law and the Villanova School of Business offer a joint-degree program permitting simultaneous study for the Juris Doctor and the Master of Business Administration degrees. The Villanova School of Business is one of the few business schools in the nation whose Master of Business Administration and Department of Accountancy program have been approved by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business.[citation needed] In the program, credit is given for certain courses by both the School of Law and the School of Business. Through this program, degrees may be completed in less time than it would take to obtain them separately.[4]

Graduate Tax Program

The Graduate Tax Program is an interdisciplinary program led by Leslie M. Book conducted under the auspices of the Villanova University School of Law and Villanova’s School of Business. The program has over 30 courses, which are also available to JD candidates, who are able to enroll in LL.M. courses as well as participate in the joint JD/LL.M. program.[5] Business students participating in the Graduate Tax Program may earn a Master of Science in Taxation (MST) degree.

Moorad Center for the Study of Sports Law

The Jeffrey S. Moorad Center for the Study of Sports Law was created in 2012, and was funded by a $5 million donation from San Diego Padres vice chairman and CEO Jeffrey S. Moorad (a 1981 graduate of the law school). The Center prepares students for careers in sports-related fields.[6] It is one of only a few in the United States dedicated to the study of sports law, and it is run by director Andrew Brandt, a lawyer, former NFL team executive, and ESPN commentator.[7]

Special programs

Beyond the skills of written and oral expression developed in the first-year writing program and the required upper-level moot court program, drafting, and seminar courses, Villanova University School of Law students acquire the fundamental skills of the practicing lawyer—including counseling, negotiation, advocacy, mediation, dispute resolution, conciliation, and mature judgment.[citation needed] Hands-on clinical opportunities allow students to apply classroom experiences to real-world client representation, often while performing public service. Clinical programs include Federal Tax; Civil Justice; Asylum, Refugee, and Emigrant Services; and Farmworkers Legal Aid.[8]

The school also strives to provide leadership in information technology, law and psychology, taxation, and international law, among other fields.[citation needed]

Rankings and honors

The 2015 edition of U.S. News & World Report's "Best Graduate Schools" increased Villanova Law's ranking to 87th in the country overall.[9] In previous years, U.S. News & World Report's "Best Graduate Schools" ranked Villanova Law #93 (2014), #101 (2013), #81 (2012), #67 (2011), and #61 (2010).

The 2015 edition of Above the Law's Top 50 Law Schools ranked Villanova as the 38th best law school in the country.[10]

In 2015, the National Law Journal ranked Villanova Law as the #34 "Go-To" law school based on its employment statistics with the nation's largest law firms.[11]

Class Statistics

Fall 2012 Entering Class Profile:[12]

  • Total Number Applicants: 2333
  • Total Enrolled: 220
  • In-state: 49%
  • Out-of-state: 51%
  • Students of Color: 17%
  • Undergraduate Schools Represented: 121

GPA:

  • Median GPA: 3.51
  • 25th Percentile GPA: 3.29
  • 75th Percentile GPA: 3.69

LSAT:

  • Median LSAT: 158
  • 25th Percentile LSAT: 155
  • 75th Percentile LSAT: 161

Publications

Students of the Juris Doctor (JD) program are involved in preparing and publishing the Villanova Law Review, as well as other law journals. Members of the law review are selected on the basis of academic rank or through an open writing competition. The Villanova Law Review was first published in 1956.[citation needed]

The law journals are:

The Villanova Environmental Law Journal publishes both student and outside articles dealing with environmental issues.

The Jeffrey S. Moorad Sports Law Journal contains articles prepared by students, practitioners, and professors that concern both sports and entertainment law.[13]

Notable faculty

Notable alumni

Student activities

Competitions

Each year, second and third-year students practice lawyering skills through the Client Interviewing and Counseling Competition. Students also have the opportunity to participate in the Reimels Moot Court Competition once during their time at Villanova, which is where students are required to write an appellate brief and compete in multiple rounds of oral arguments. The competition is run by the Villanova Law Moot Court Board.

Library and physical facilities

In the law library, students have access to 130 computer workstations located in a computer lab and throughout the library’s stacks. There are an additional 40 computers dedicated to student usage throughout the remainder of the law school. In addition, all students with laptops can access Villanova University’s high-speed internet connection and all of the technology resources throughout the law school via wired and wireless connections. Finally, the law library contains more than 500,000 volume-equivalents in books and microforms, along with subscriptions to numerous legal databases to which students have ready access.[citation needed]

Career strategy and advancement

The mission of the Career Strategy and Advancement Office is to provide career planning education, recruitment programs, and individual counseling as the foundation for future career development and satisfaction of the students. The office's features and programs include three attorney-advisors, including a public service/pro bono specialist; an open-door policy, including a daily "on call" advisor for walk-ins and "quick questions"; small group workshops for 1Ls; dozens of career workshops and panel programs on topics ranging from interviews, résumés, and networking, to public interest careers, judicial clerkships, and a multitude of practice specialty areas; "Practice Specialty Expo," which brings nearly 100 attorneys to the law school for a networking experience; recruitment programs throughout the year, including an array of employers in private practice (large and small firms), government, nonprofits, the judiciary, and corporations; special recruitment programs designed to enhance diversity in the profession; job fairs targeting unique geographic or practice preferences; and job search coaching for new graduates on the job market.[citation needed]

Placement

According to Villanova's official 2014 ABA-required disclosures, 70% of the Class of 2014 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment nine months after graduation, excluding solo practitioners.[34]

ABA Employment Summary for 2014 Graduates[35]
Employment Status Percentage
Employed – Bar Passage Required
  
70%
Employed – J.D. Advantage
  
17%
Employed – Professional Position
  
1%
Employed – Non-Professional Position
  
1%
Employed – Undeterminable
  
0%
Pursuing Graduate Degree Full Time
  
1%
Unemployed – Start Date Deferred
  
1%
Unemployed – Not Seeking
  
1%
Unemployed – Seeking
  
8%
Employment Status Unknown
  
0%
Total of 220 Graduates

Pro bono programs

Pro bono programs, such as the clinics and other projects, provide students with the opportunity to serve the disadvantaged while developing skills and positive relationships with practicing attorneys.[36]

Lawyering Together

Villanova Law's student body has the opportunity to participate in the "Lawyering Together" program. Through the program, law students are matched with volunteer attorneys who assist clients referred through Philadelphia pro bono organizations.[37] The referring organizations include Senior Law Center, Philadelphia Volunteers for the Indigent Program (VIP) and the Support Center for Child Advocates.[38]

Recent Deans

Mark Sargent

Sargent graduated magna cum laude in 1973 from Wesleyan, received an M.A. in Medieval Studies in 1975 from Cornell University, and graduated from Cornell Law School in 1978. He began teaching law in 1980, was the Piper & Marbury Professor of Law and Associate Dean for Academic Affairs and Director of the Law & Entrepreneurship Program at the University of Maryland School of Law. He has also previously taught law at American University, Southern Methodist University and the University of Baltimore Schools of Law.[39]

In 2006, Dean Sargent worked with the Pepper Hamilton LLP to launch a diversity initiative that included two full tuition scholarships for minority students and hiring two Villanova Law School minority students each year as first-year summer associates and then as part-time law clerks during their second or third academic years.[40] In July 2009, Villanova Law School Dean Mark Sargent resigned, citing medical and personal reasons.[41] A week later, the Philadelphia Inquirer reported that Sargent was connected with the solicitation of prostitution, although he was never charged.[42] In February 2011, Villanova's newly appointed dean, John Gotanda, revealed that a Law School committee had determined that the under the leadership of the former Dean Mark Sargent, false data had been reported to the American Bar Association about incoming students for several years before 2010. This resulted in censure by the ABA as well as a 2-year probation by the AALS.[43] Villanova began a comprehensive internal investigation and commissioned an independent audit by Ropes & Gray to determine the nature and scope of the false reporting.[44]

John Gotanda

Dean John Gotanda became dean at Villanova University School of Law on January 1, 2011 after having previously served as the Associate Dean for Academic Affairs, Associate Dean for Faculty Research, and Director of the J.D./M.B.A. Program.[45] Dean Gotanda received his J.D. from the William S. Richardson School of Law, where he was Editor-in-Chief of the University of Hawaii Law Review. Before coming to Villanova in 1994 he was a staff attorney with the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. He also worked as an associate attorney with Covington & Burling in Washington, D.C., and later with Goodwin, Procter & Hoar in Boston.[46]

Notes and references

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  4. http://www.villanova.edu/business/graduate/jdmba/
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  6. http://www.bizjournals.com/philadelphia/blog/jeff-blumenthal/2012/02/san-diego-padres-ceo-moorad-donates.html?page=all
  7. http://articles.philly.com/2012-09-15/business/33845015_1_sports-law-jeffrey-s-moorad-center-law-students
  8. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Academics/Clinical%20Programs/Clinics.aspx
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  12. Stats and Facts: Villanova Law School [1] VLS website
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  36. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Current%20Students/Public%20Service/Pro%20Bono/Pro%20Bono%20Programs.aspx
  37. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Current%20Students/Public%20Service/Pro%20Bono/Pro%20Bono%20Programs.aspx
  38. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Current%20Students/Public%20Service/Pro%20Bono/Pro%20Bono%20Programs.aspx
  39. http://works.bepress.com/mark_sargent/
  40. http://www.strategicdiversity.com/Press_Releases_Pepper_Hamilton_Villanova_Diversity_Initiative.htm
  41. David Lat (7/3/09) Dean Mark Sargent - You Can Call Him John Above the Law. Retrieved 2/5/11.
  42. Jeff Blumenthal (7/7/09) Villanova dean resigned over prostitution Philadelphia Business Journal. Retrieved 2/5/11.
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  44. Martha Neil (2/4/11) [2] ABA Journal. Retrieved 2/5/11.
  45. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Our%20Faculty/Faculty%20Profiles/John%20Y%20Gotanda.aspx
  46. http://www.law.villanova.edu/Our%20Faculty/Faculty%20Profiles/John%20Y%20Gotanda.aspx

External links