TO: Law School Faculty
FROM: M. Patricia Adamski
Vice Dean and Professor of Law
RE: Upper Class
Writing Requirements - Seminars and Independent Study
I am writing to remind you of the standards
adopted by the faculty for satisfying the upper-class writing
requirements. Please note that to fulfill Upper-Class writing
Requirement I, a student must write a substantial
scholarly research paper under the supervision of a full-time faculty
member. Close faculty supervision of the
writing process is required as described below. A memorandum
of law, brief, or other similar advocacy document
does not satisfy Upper-Class Writing Requirement I.
Upper-Class Writing Requirement II may be satisfied
through writing a substantial research paper in a seminar or
Independent Study, or by writing a paper or series of papers in a drafting,
simulation, clinical, or other course. The
cumulative writing necessary to meet Writing Requirement II must be
at least 20 pages, and the writing must involve
legal analysis, legal reasoning, and/or philosophical reflection.
If students work in teams, the 20 pages of writing
that will be used to count towards the satisfaction of the proposed
writing requirement must be identifiable as the
writing of an individual student.
To satisfy either writing requirement, close
faculty supervision of the writing process is required. Please note
that
these requirements apply if writing credit is given in a seminar or
in Independent Study. The faculty has
emphasized that students must receive feedback on their written work
in sufficient time for them to take advantage of
faculty input in subsequent written work. The following procedures
were adopted as the minimum standards for
writing supervision:
a. Students must submit a detailed sentence or paragraph-type outline of
their paper to the
faculty member, which outline should be discussed and should be commented
on by the
faculty member, or,
b. At least one draft of the paper should be submitted, which draft should
be discussed and
should be commented on by the faculty member, and,
c. A final paper should then be submitted.
In a few courses, such as drafting courses,
the submission of outlines and drafts is unnecessary because
the required writing consists of a series of papers. It place
of the submission of outlines and drafts of a
single written work, students must receive written or oral evaluations
on each piece of writing as the semester
progresses.
Let me also remind you that the minimum grade
necessary to satisfy the writing requirement is a C+ on
the paper. A grade of C+ in the course that reflects an increase
in the paper grade based upon class
participation is not sufficient.