The Law Faculty of South Texas - Houston , is a private law school accredited by the American Bar Association and is a member of the Association of American Law Schools. Located in Downtown Houston, Texas, United States, was founded in 1923 - the oldest law school in Houston and the third oldest in Texas. 1 2
South Texas College of Law Houston has a full-time faculty of 59 professors and 40 additional professors.
US News has consistently developed South Texas trial advocacy programs in the top ten; in 2010, South Texas advocacy was ranked third in the country by US. News â ⬠in experimental advocacy. The Texas College of Law of Southern Houston holds more than 121 national and international advocacy championships, more than any other law school in the country, with the second highest degree held by law schools with fewer than 40 national championships.
According to the required disclosure in South Texas' 2013 ABA, 61.2% of the 2013 class gets full-time, long-term employment, required JD nine months after graduation.
Video South Texas College of Law
Program siswa
South Texas offers programs "3 and 3" with Texas A & amp; M University. The program allows for a bachelor's degree and juris Doctor (JD.) in six years. The South Texas Law School is also part of a consortium of four American law schools affiliated with the ABA and AALS accredited - the California Western School of Law, the Law School of New England, and William Mitchell Law College. The Consortium for Innovative Law Education, combining resources designed to enhance and strengthen the educational mission of each school separately and all collectively. This partnership provides access to national and international education programs. Students in South Texas can study abroad in London, Ireland, Malta, Czech Republic, France, the Netherlands, Denmark, Turkey, Chile, and Mexico.
Maps South Texas College of Law
Ratings
In 2005, AS. News & amp; World Report ranks experiment advocacy program in South Texas number one in the country, and consistently ranks among the top 10 each year. 3 4 In 2006, South Texas won the Trial Lawyers Association The competition competes nationwide, beating more than 260 schools. In 2007, South Texas won the National White Collateral Mock Exam Competition held by Georgetown Law School. In August 2011, South Texas has won 108 national titles. The school's final victory was at Judge John R. Brown's Admiralty Moot Court Tournament in 2011.
In 2016, Texas Texas Law school rankings are not published at the US News Ranking of the Best Law School.
South Texas College of Law Houston publishes some student-edited law scholarships edited by students, including Corporate Advisor Review , Actual: International Trade Law Journal , and Texas Legal Review South Currently not rated in US. News â â¬
Jobs
According to the disclosures required by the official ABA 2013 in South Texas, 61.2% of the 2013 class gets full-time, long-term employment, and requires JD, nine months after graduation. Under-employment Law School scores in South Texas scored 13.6%, indicating the percentage of the 2013 Class that is unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.
Cost
The total attendance cost (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) in South Texas for the academic year 2013-2014 is $ 50,010. Transparency School Law estimates a three-year funded attendance fee of $ 186,530.
Average student loan debt
The average class of graduates of 2009 has a $ 104,862 student loan debt.
Community resources
South Texas sponsors "Direct Representation Clinics", which provides legal representation for low-income residents in Harris County, Texas, in the areas of family law, probate, housing planning, and trust cases. South Texas is also Texas's first law school that provides $ 400 per month for student loans to its alumni working for nonprofit legal aid organizations that provide services to the poor.
Court of Appeal
The First Texas Appeals Court and the Fourteenth Appeals Court of Texas are located in the 1307 San Jacinto Building on the college campus of South Texas College; the first court occupied the 10th floor while the 14th court occupied the 11th floor. Since September 3, 2011, the court is now located at the Harris County Courthouse in 1911.
Trying to join Texas A & amp; M University
In 1998, Texas A & amp; M University tried to join the South Texas College of Law Houston (at that time, called the South Texas College of Law) under a public/private partnership. Under the proposal, law schools will remain private schools, but will be labeled as Texas A & amp; M Law Center and will give you a law degree under seal A & amp; M. The deal became bleak after a long legal battle with the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, a government agency of state public institutions. The court ruled that the school had failed to obtain board approval before entering into the agreement. University of Houston and other institutions voiced concerns about the partnership. In 2013, Texas A & amp; M University entered into similar agreements with the Texas Wesleyan School of Law in Fort Worth, Texas, thus creating Texas A & amp; M University School of Law.
Litigation over name change
Until mid-2016, the law school was called "South Texas College of Law". On June 22, 2016, the day when the South Texas College of Law announced the change of name to "Houston College of Law", the University of Houston (which has a Law Faculty within the University of Houston Law Center) announced that the University was "concerned about the significant confusion that occurred on the market and will take every and every appropriate legal action to protect our institutional interests, our brand, and our position in the communities we serve. " The University of Houston System filed a lawsuit on June 27, 2016, in a US federal district court in Houston. On October 14, 2016, the US District Court issued a preliminary court order requiring South Texas College to stop using the name "Houston College of Law," pending further developments in the case.
On November 7, 2016, the dean of law school announced that the name would be changed to "Texas South Texas College of Law".
Famous Alumni
- Richard Anderson, CEO of Amtrak, former CEO of Delta Airlines
- Chris Bell, former member of the US Congress
- Briscoe Cain, a Republican who came from the Texas Representative Council for District 128 in Harris County; lawyer in Deer Park, Texas
- Robert R. Casey, former member of the US Congress
- John Culberson, Member of US Congress
- John P. Devine, Texas Supreme Court Justice, Place 4, since 2013
- Robert Eckels, former state representative and Harris County county judge
- Brian Eppes, former television actor
- Joseph Gutheinz, a lawyer who has investigated the stolen and stolen moon stone
- Eva Guzman, Texas Supreme Court, Judge
- Charles Holcomb, Texas Court of Criminal Appeals Court, 2001 to 2010
- Joan Huffman, a member of the Texas State Senate from Harris County since 2008; former state district court judge
- Patrica R. "Pat" Lykos, former Harris District Attorney
- David M. Medina, former Texas Supreme Court
- Sam Nuchia, former Houston Police Chief
- Reed O'Connor, US District Judge for Northern District of Texas
- Madalyn Murray O'Hair, American Atheist Founder
- And Rather, a former reader of CBS News (Not passing)
- Leighton Schubert, Texas Representative Council member since 2015 for District 13; lawyer in Caldwell, Texas
- Jim Sharp, state court judge in Houston, 2009-2014
- Robert Talton, member of Texas Representative Council from 1993 to 2009; candidate for Supreme Court Justice of Texas Supreme Court on March 4, 2014
- Austin Walton, a certified NBA agent and owner of the Walton Sports Management Group
- Kelly Siegler, former prominent Harris District Attorney and star of "Cold Justice" on Oxygen Network
Note
- ^ 1 Resources: Cambridge Abroad Study Program
- ^ 2 Source: Texas Online Handbook
- ^ 3 Source: South Texas Law School, "News and Events"
- ^ 4 Source: AS. World News and Reports: Americas Best Graduate Schools: Law Specialties: Trial Advocacy
References
External links
- Official website
- Digital Collection in Fred's Law Library Library
Source of the article : Wikipedia