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UNI DALLAS COLLEGE of L BUILT for TEXAS-SIZED DREAMS

Transcript of FFelecia Eppselecia Epps

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UNI DALLAS

COLLEGE of LAW

BUILT for TEXAS-SIZED DREAMS

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UNT DALLAS COLLEGE OF LAW, JOIN US AT THE CENTER OF IT ALLIt’s the dawn of a new era in downtown Dallas.

The urban landscape is bustling. People from all walks of life come to Dallas to work and play. The job market in Dallas is among the most vibrant and diverse economic engines in America. At the center of it all is the University of North Texas Dallas College of Law.

UNT Dallas College of Law is one of the most affordable and diverse law schools in the country.

We are motivated by our mission to promote justice and advance human potential through the enterprise of legal education. UNT Dallas College of Law was created to help modernize legal education in our region.

We are committed to affordability and accessibility, serving a diverse population in Dallas-Fort Worth that previously had no access to a public law school.

We partnered with the City of Dallas to revitalize the Main Street area of downtown. Our new home, the historic Old City Hall, has been transformed and reborn as the UNT Dallas Law Center.

Offering the only evening program in North Texas, as well as a traditional full-time track, UNT Dallas College of Law is your pathway to a career in law. We have been awarded provisional accreditation by the American Bar Association. That means all of our graduates are eligible to take the Bar Examination in Texas, or elsewhere, before entering the No. 1 job market in the country.

Visit us in the heart of downtown Dallas, or check us out online at https://lawschool.untdallas.edu.

UNT Dallas College of Law. . .affordable, innovative, and diverse.

Join us at the center of it all.

Felecia EppsFelecia EppsFelecia Epps

Dean and Professor of Law, UNT Dallas College of Law

85% Minority

15%WHITE

48%HISPANIC

30%AFRICAN

AMERICAN

7%OTHER

DIVERSITY IS IN OUR DNA

UNT Dallas College of Law ranks among the most diverse law schools in the country, with a student body that is 85% minority and reflects the changing demographics of Texas.

Our students come from a wide array of backgrounds— many work full-time, many are parents, and many are

veterans who served our country.

Our parent university is recognized as a minority-serving institution by the U.S. Department of Education.

FLEXIBILITY TO FIT YOUR LIFESTYLE Not only does UNT Dallas College of Law offer a full-time track,

we also offer the only night/evening track in Dallas-Fort Worth for students that work full-time during the day.

2020UNT Dallas

College of Law Entering Class

Our campus is inclusive and professional.

58%Women

41%Students of color

17%Hold advanced

degrees

Median Age

28Age range 21-62

4%Military

UNT DALLAS STUDENT BODY

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UNT DALLAS COLLEGE OF LAW You have a unique opportunity to be a part of something new at UNT Dallas College of Law. Our law school, which admitted its first students in 2014, is not bound by the restraints of traditional legal education.

UNT Dallas College of Law is initiating change. Our curriculum stretches far beyond traditional classroom learning. We provide our students with hands-on experiences and meaningful opportunities to engage with members of the community, lawyers, and legal scholars.

Our mission at UNT Dallas College of Law is to promote justice and advance human potential through the enterprise of legal education.

OUR MISSION HAS FIVE GOALS:ACCESSExpand access to legal education for those who are capable of becoming legal professionals but have lacked realistic access to legal education.

PREPARATIONProvide insights from legal educators as well as legal practitioners.

VALUECreate opportunity for students by keeping tuition and debt low while consistently delivering an excellent legal education.

INNOVATIONLead in the advancement of best legal education practices and of the evolving business of practicing law.

COMMUNITYPartner with legal professionals in the downtown area and the Dallas-Fort Worth community.

Six Reasons To Join Us: WE OFFER AN INNOVATIVE APPROACH TO LEGAL EDUCATION

Because sound legal judgment is cultivated by experience, we combine traditional classroom education with experiential education that emphasizes learning by doing. We utilize the best instructional practices by offering engaged, experiential, and collaborative learning in addition to providing ongoing assessments of our students.

Most of our upper level courses include a “lab” component that while developing practical competencies. Our students actively participate in practice settings

reinforces the subject matter

while receiving mentoring and guidance.

WE FOCUS ON REAL-WORLD PRACTICE ABILITIES

Our students not only learn legal theory but also practical skills: how to negotiate, how to prepare an agreement, and how to manage a practice. In short, they learn skills that relate to practicing real law in the real world. Our students also move purposefully towards readiness to pass the bar exam upon graduation.

WE GIVE YOU THE CONVENIENCE AND CONNECTIONS OF DALLAS

Our presence in downtown Dallas places us close to the courts, to the bar associations, and to outstanding lawyers. As a professional school, UNT Dallas College of Law and our students will gain by proximity to experienced members of the profession, from externships, and from other opportunities that will enrich the classroom experience.

WE MAKE A LEGAL EDUCATION AVAILABLE TO MORE STUDENTS

We believe a community’s lawyers should be as diverse as the communities they serve. We are committed to serving a wide range of students who have the potential to be successful lawyers—not just those who score the highest on standard admission tests.

WE OFFER A GREAT VALUE IN LEGAL EDUCATION

UNT Dallas College of Law is affordable. Current tuition and fees are among the lowest in Texas. We are a public law school, committed to offering a quality legal education at an extremely competitive cost. As a new school, we are without legacy costs. By controlling expenses, we will keep tuition at a level that increases options for our graduates, who will be able to then follow their individual career paths unencumbered by unreasonable debt.

YOU WILL BE PART OF A NEW AND EXCITING PROGRAM

We are located in a newly-renovated, historic building equipped with outstanding technology, and collaborative spaces. Our curriculum is not only focused on learning theory but also lawyering skills such as mediation, drafting, negotiation, and oral argument. Our award-winning Legal Writing curriculum prepares students for success in practice by continuously improving techniques throughout their coursework.

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OUR MODERN APPROACH TO LEGAL EDUCATIONOur law program is designed to help students realize the following abilities:

Understand the privilege and responsibility of being a lawyer

Develop practice-related competencies and a professional identity

Open doors and expand opportunities within the legal profession

Our curriculum is different from other law schools. We utilize an integrated focus on experiential learning. We prepare students to practice law upon graduation by weaving in writing skills through courses, offering performance-based continuous feedback, and ensuring participation in a clinic or externship.

Experiential learning helps students carve out professional lanes for themselves. Our education curriculum makes it easier to discover which segments of law speak to students in particular, what excites or moves them about practicing a specific discipline, and which work setting is the most fitting for their personalities and career goals.

In many of our classes, students gain experiential learning by encountering what lawyers do in the workplace in a hands-on manner. This is especially true in legal research classes. Half the classes are breakout sessions in which students may work collaboratively to dig into legal information resources and discover the details of truth that guides them to the most likely answer for their clients’ problems.

The legal community extends beyond law school—to judges, practicing for the bar exam and other legal organizations. From classrooms to courtrooms to boardrooms, students have opportunities to give simulation presentations and to participate in advocacy training and advocacy competitions.

BAR EXAM PREP

At the UNT Dallas College of Law, all upper-level students take two-semester sequences of capstone courses that focus on bar exam readiness. Students take the courses during their final year of law school, and each is a 3-hour graded course. The capstone courses build on students’ doctrinal, analytical, and skills foundations. The courses consolidate doctrinal understanding and strengthen skills with the aim of successfully preparing students to take the bar exam.

While studying for the bar exam, we hope every student learns and appreciates that it is not the final test of their law school career, but rather the beginning of a career of lifelong learning.

That tuition includes the cost of a bar review course so students do not have to incur the cost of one after law school.

EARNING YOUR J.D. DEGREE

The Juris Doctor (J.D.) program at UNT Dallas requires 90 hours for students to graduate. Full-time students typically earn their J.D. in three years. Our Part-time program, with convenient evening courses for working students, typically takes four years to complete.

Our faculty is special. We are committed to feedback, accessibility, rubrics, and teaching innovation. Our faculty gets involved in students’ success. Faculty members teach in day and evening sections and participate in student organization activities. Our adjunct faculty are experienced judges and lawyers who work in the Dallas- Ft. Worth Metroplex.

The Faculty at UNT Dallas College of Law believes in a sound curriculum design and best teaching practices. We bring extensive and top-notch practice experience into the classroom. We are fixtures in the Dallas legal community. We believe our students deserve the best of us and it is our promise to deliver.

FACULTY

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CENTER FOR WRITING EXCELLENCEOur students are known throughout Texas for solid writing skills. Legal writing is a central part of each student’s legal education at UNT Dallas College of Law. We prioritize teaching our students to think critically, analyze, and synthesize the law. We do not see these traditional law school skills as the end. Rather, we see them only as the starting point for students to achieve excellence in legal writing. As with the rest of the curriculum at the College of Law, the legal writing curriculum is designed to maximize students’ abilities in the classroom, on the bar exam, and ultimately in practice. Our three-semester, nine-credit legal writing curriculum has been carefully crafted to ensure that UNT Dallas College of Law students are equipped with the writing skills needed to serve their clients and their communities as successful attorneys immediately after graduation.

Our focus during the first year (Legal Writing I and Legal Writing II) is to teach students the basic skills.

At UNT Dallas College of Law, nearly all full-time faculty members teach by allocating legal writing assignments that are incorporated into the curriculum in most of the doctrinal and skills-based courses.

LEGAL RESEARCH Legal research trains students to build on the foundation of their legal information literacy, a foundation that underlies all of their other efforts in law school. Entering the practice of law opens up a world filled with a new vocabulary and sources of information; students must learn how to find, read, and analyze these sources of information to become proficient lawyers. By the time students complete their first-year legal research class, they have a solid understanding of the differences and the interrelationships of the primary sources of statutes, cases, and regulations. They also know how to apply these in their practice of law, and how they can use secondary sources to better understand the primary sources and apply primary sources.

COMMUNITY LAWYERING CENTERSStudents have the amazing opportunity to engage in service within the Dallas community, allowing them to gain experience and put their skills into practice as they continue to grow. They will utilize our Community Lawyering Centers and the Joyce Ann Brown Innocence Clinic in their second and third years.

CLIENT REPRESENTATION FOR LEGAL ISSUES

Eligible residents in the community can seek free legal services at a UNT Dallas College of Law Community Lawyering Center. Cases are handled by law students from the UNT Dallas College of Law. All law students are supervised by faculty from the UNT Dallas College of Law, the experienced attorneys from Legal Aid of Northwest Texas, the Dallas Public Defender’s Office, and other qualified attorneys.

Assistance is available for several types of legal matters at a Community Lawyering Center, including:

· Housing/Evictions · Child Custody· Family Law · Immigration· Child Support · Wills and Probate

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JUDGE LOUIS A. BEDFORD, JR. MENTORSHIP PROGRAM

UNT Dallas College of Law’s signature mentorship program was created to develop professionalism, to enhance knowledge of practice and skills, and to build professional networks. Through this program our students build relationships, develop professional behaviors, gain understanding of ethical competencies, and gain connections to our robust and growing community.

Participation and successful completion of the Bedford Mentorship Program is a requirement for graduation. Our first year students (Full-time/Day or Part-time/Evening), are required to spend one hour each week in a Mentor Group that consists of 8-10 students and 3-4 attorneys. Attorneys from the community volunteer their time to help develop professionalism and to enhance knowledge of practice and skills. Most importantly, mentors and students get to know each other and form professional relationships. Mentors can become valuable resources for networking as students launch their legal careers.

CAMPUS AND STUDENT ORGANIZATIONSSixteen Recognized Student Organizations:

Student Bar AssociationAmerican Constitution SocietyAmerican Muslim Law Student Association Asian Pacific American Law Student AssociationBlack Law Student AssociationChristian Legal SocietyCriminal Law Student AssociationFederalist SocietyHispanic Law Student AssociationImmigration and Public Interest Law Student Association Progressive Law Student AssociationSports and Entertainment Law Student AssociationStudent Animal Legal Defense FundStudent Business Law SocietyVeterans Law Student AssociationWomen in Law Student Association

Recognized Student Organizations are an important way for students to become involved and pursue their interests while enrolled at the College of Law. The Student Bar Association is the College of Law’s student government. All law students who are in good standing with the University are members of the Student Bar Association.

The College of Law currently has 15 additional Recognized Student Organizations. Each of these organizations was created by student initiatives to focus on the aspects of the legal profession and the types of law that are important to them. Law students who want to create new Recognized Student Organizations are encouraged to do so in accordance with University and Student Bar Association rules.

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OFFICE OF CAREER AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENTThe Office of Career and Professional Development (OCPD) at UNT Dallas College of Law provides resources to help graduates effectively utilize their law degrees as they navigate the changing job market. Seasoned professionals regularly share valuable career information with law students that allows them to understand their own skills and interests, the operational aspects of practicing law, the changing marketplace for legal services, and the range of practice pathways.

We partner with students to facilitate the identification of professional interests and support the development of an individualized professional roadmap by using one-on-one sessions and group events. We are here to guide law students as they develop ideas and goals for their future career opportunities and professional development.

JOB POSTINGSThe OCPD posts available paid and unpaid opportunities and other information designed to keep students informed about professional development events on Symplicity, which is an online interface that allows students to view available jobs and internships.

MOCK INTERVIEWSMock interviews offer our students several opportunities to practice, receive constructive suggestions, and optimize their potential for conducting successful interviews before the real thing. The OCPD conducts a formal program to connect students with seasoned attorneys for mock interviews. Each career counselor is also trained to conduct mock interviews in preparation for various forms of actual interviews.

PRESENTATIONS AND EVENTSWith the organized input from designated student ambassadors, the OCPD organizes panels and other events for exposure to various practice areas. We offer formalized resume reviews, cover letter writing workshops, one-on-one career advising sessions, and assistance with personal statements.

ALUMNI RELATIONS

ALUMNI

Beginning with the Inaugural Class seated in 2014, the law students who chose UNT Dallas College of Law for their legal education have proven to be special individuals. Year after year, our students reflect the law school’s goal of expanding access to legal education through the selection of a student population richly inclusive across age, gender, life experience, race and ethnicity, and socio-economic backgrounds. We expect that our alumni will carry their unique law school educational experiences forward and continue to value inclusiveness, service to the community, innovation, and especially civility, and professionalism.

WAYS TO ENGAGE

As a young law school, the willingness of alumni and friends to engage with our students, advocacy programs, Community Lawyering Centers, Law Review, student organizations, and other programs creates unique opportunities to make profound, positive impacts at UNT Dallas College of Law. We have new programs and activities each year that count on helpful participation from alumni and friends. Learn more at https://lawschool.untdallas.edu/engage

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“QUOTABLES” FROM ALUMNIAbraham Mijares: “Time management is key. Read everything before class.

When you get to class, it shouldn’t be the first time you’re seeing it.”

Loren Raiford: “You can get a quality education here for an affordable price and come out with minimal debt.”

Juan Garcia: “People here come from different backgrounds and being that everybody is so different, with different points of views, we all get to learn from one

another and teach one another.”

Johnelle Peer: “Enjoy the journey.”

Vera (Ann) Theodorou: “Personally, to get here from where I’m from…people like me don’t have opportunities like this. To be a high school dropout, to come from a place of extreme poverty and to be here is a privilege…and I’m really grateful that

this was my school.”

Veronica Carroll: “Take a breath, take an at-ease, stay steadfast and keep your eyes on the road, then you’ll accomplish it.”

Taylor Hennington: “What I look forward to the most, after law school is finally getting the chance to see all of the fruits of my hard work come to life by being

able to finally be a practicing attorney and being the most effective one at that…for my clients.”

SALUTE TO THE GRADUATES

To the UNT Dallas College of Law graduated classes, your place in history as a group of committed colleagues who pulled together and lifted one another up while constantly embroiled in fierce

but friendly competition has forged a unit of determined individuals, who shared the goal of finishing what you started, together.

Be mindful that your legacy will not only be defined by your recent completion of law school or your membership in a particular graduating class. Yes, you will be counted among the pioneers and

trailblazers of UNT Dallas College of Law, as well you should. However, your legacy will also be established in how well you serve as the next line of defense for the law. Your duty requires

steadfast advocacy for the underprivileged and your diligence in seeking justice for clients, who very well might be placing their livelihood or freedom in your hands.

Yes, that is a heavy load to bear but you were built to carry it.

To the graduated classes at UNT Dallas College of Law, your faculty and staff salute you all and wish you the very best of luck.

Felecia EppsFelecia Epps

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STUDENT LIFE IN A WORLD-CLASS CITY

WORLD-CLASSWORK & PLAYThe Dallas region features a strong business climate in a central location with two great airports. It is a great environment for innovation, which offers promising opportunities for all who live here.

As a UNT Dallas College of Law student you will be located in the center of it all. Dallas was recently named the nation’s No. 1 Job Market by Forbes. Thousands of local businesses, law firms, government agencies, non-profits, and community organizations are located just minutes away from our downtown campus.

From a quality of life standpoint, Dallas-Fort Worth offers world class museums, recreational parks, dining, shopping, entertainment, and sports activities. Whether working or playing, the possibilities are limitless.

REBIRTH IN DOWNTOWN

DALLASWhere past and present intersect

to form a bright future

The UNT Dallas College of Law’s downtown campus includes its primary location at the UNT Dallas Law Center—the historic Old City Hall at 106 S. Harwood Street—as well as the Lee F. Jackson Building, just a half-block away at 1901 Main Street.

Both UNT Dallas College of Law buildings serve as catalysts for economic redevelopment in Dallas and include convenient access to DART light rail stations. Dallas is home to thousands of corporations, law firms, government agencies, small businesses, non-profit organizations, and community centers that need legal support.

A unique partnership has transformed Old City Hall into the new home of the UNT Dallas College of Law, while maintaining significant historic elements dating back to the building’s inception in 1914, as well as the events of President John F. Kennedy’s assassination in 1963. The neighboring Lee F. Jackson Building, also a historic renovation, houses the law school’s moot court and law library.

We’re looking for motivated students with the potential to be great lawyers. If that sounds like you, join us.

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UNT Dallas College of Law recently opened the doors to our new home and it ushered in a new era in Dallas. The Old City Hall was built in 1914 with majestic features for the time period and it is still a notable centerpiece in the Main Street District of Dallas today. 106 S. Harwood St.; Dallas, TX 75201 is one of the most famous addresses in the city. Fittingly, its grand municipal edifice was created as a new standard in architecture and a beacon for justice, with the explicit promise of turning the wheels of justice forward. In many ways, the building has lived up to its design.

After undergoing a $70 million renovation project, the Old City Hall has now become the UNT Dallas Law Center. It is hailed as a new beginning for the historical landmark and for the UNT Dallas College of Law, which proudly accepts the challenge of shining brightly as a beacon of justice.

Substantial measures of teamwork, sacrifice, and unyielding determination have been poured into the foundation. In the same vein, those three attributes are required of our students as they charge toward the noble calling to practice law. We invite you to become a part of a great law institution as a brilliant legacy emerges. Join our quest for excellence in education at the UNT Dallas College of Law.

LAW LIBRARY

OUR LOCATION AND DESIGN

The Law Library occupies the full sixth floor of the Lee F. Jackson Building, covering more than 20,000 square feet. Completely redesigned and renovated, the facility provides collaborative work study rooms, effective access to digital and print information, and individual study and research rooms.

VISITING THE LAW LIBRARYThe Law Library for the College of Law is primarily for the use of College of Law students, faculty, and staff. Students, faculty, and staff from other UNT System institutions and members of the Bar Association are also allowed access to the Law Library. To receive access to the Law Library, proof of identity, as well as proof of connection to the UNT System or Bar Association will be required at the Security Desk on the first floor upon entering the building. Visitors will be provided a name badge and directions or an escort.

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WE ARE THE FUTURE. WE STAND FOR CHANGE.

WE BELIEVE IN INNOVATION.

ADMISSIONSUNT Dallas College of Law is one of the most affordable law schools in Texas and one of the most diverse law schools in the country. Diversity is a quintessential part of our DNA. Motivated by the mission to promote justice and advance human potential through the

enterprise of legal education, UNT Dallas College of Law was created to help modernize

law school education in our region.

TAKE A TOURProspective students are invited to tour the UNT Dallas College of Law facility in downtown Dallas during the fall and spring semesters. Our current location is in UNT Dallas Law Center in the historic Municipal Building, located at 106 South Harwood Street. The Municipal Building is located diagonally across from the Jackson Building at 1901 Main Street, where the Law Library resides.

GROUP TOURSIf you are a Pre-Law Advisor or Instructor, please contact Admissions at [email protected] or 214.752.5981 to schedule a Group Tour.

INDIVIDUAL TOURSIf you are an individual wishing to tour the College of Law on your own, or with up to three guests in your party, please complete and submit an ink written copy of the following form https://lawschool.untdallas.edu/take-tour. Individuals requesting a tour may be scheduled with other individuals for the actual tour. Generally, individual tour groups do not exceed 10-12 guests.

NURTURING A DIVERSE COMMUNITY THROUGH AFFORDABILITY AND ACCESS

ADMISSIONS: All of the materials needed for your application are submitted online. The main “portal” for this purpose is the Law School Admission Council (LSAC). The LSAC is a non-profit entity that processes application materials for law school applicants nationwide. It also administers the Law School Admission Test (LSAT), and provides extensive information and services relating to law schools generally. Once you set up an account with the LSAC, you will register with the Credential Assembly Service (CAS).

In summary, completing the application will require these steps:

1. Create an account at LSAC.org2. Take the LSAT3. Register with the CAS4. Complete the UNT Dallas College of Law application and submit all required documents online

CHARACTER AND FITNESS

All states require applicants for the bar exam to establish their character and fitness to practice law. All law school applicants should carefully review the character and fitness requirements for the state in which they intend to practice.

CONTACTING THE OFFICE OF ADMISSIONS

Office of AdmissionsUNT Dallas College of Law106. S. Harwood St. Dallas, TX 75201214.752.5981 or [email protected]

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TOP LAW SCHOOLS IN AMERICA FOR

DIVERSITY

2017-18MOST INNOVATIVE

COLLEGE OF LAW

MOST DIVERSELAW SCHOOLS IN AMERICA

2019NO. 8

PRELAW AND NATIONAL JURIST MAGAZINE

BEST LAW SCHOOLSFOR AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDENTS

2018NO. 10

BEST LAW SCHOOLSFOR HISPANIC STUDENTS

2018TOP 20

2017TOP 20PRELAW AND NATIONAL

JURIST MAGAZINE

DIVERSITYOUT OF 60 LAW SCHOOLS

2019

A+

PRELAW AND NATIONAL JURIST MAGAZINE

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REGIONAL CHAMPS UNT DALLAS COLLEGE OF LAW WINS TYLA REGIONAL MOCK TRIAL COMPETITION

UNT Dallas College of Law sent students to Tulsa, Oklahoma on January 30, 2020 to participate in the Texas Young Lawyer’s Association (TYLA) Regional Mock Trial Competition. The Competition was stiff but the UNTD COL 3L Team of Abby Brown, Maia Bartee, and Samantha McDanel managed to defeat every formidable foe on their way to victory. In the end, they sauntered away with the TYLA Mock Trial Championship and Region 11 bragging rights for an entire year.

UNT DALLAS COLLEGE OF LAW NOTCHES MOOT COURT REGIONAL WIN

UNT Dallas College of Law might be the youngest legal education program in America but it certainly shook up the landscape of established titans during the Oklahoma City Regional Moot Court Competitions. In the past six months, three UNT Dallas Advocacy teams have qualified for National contests in the Mock Trial, Moot Court and Tax Law categories.

During the Spring 2020 semester, the team of Jerica Steward, Kamran Anwar and Hamza Ahmed brought home the gold. After winning first place at the ABA Moot Court Regionals, they soared to a third place finish for their written brief. Anwar also earned a Top Ten ranking (#7) for Best Advocate.

UNT DALLAS WINS REGIONALS ABA TAX CHALLENGE

The UNT Dallas College of Law team of Taylor Monroe and Stephen (Mark) Watterson made it to the semi-finals (top 6 out of 81 teams) at the American Bar Association Tax Challenge. The UNT Dallas College of Law team went on to win regionals. Congratulations!

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UNT DALLAS COLLEGE OF LAW106 S. Harwood StreetDallas, Texas 75201https://lawschool.untdallas.edu

OFFICE OF ADMISSIONSPHONE: 214-752-5981EMAIL: [email protected]

UNT Dallas College of Law is provisionally approved by the American Bar Association’s Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar. Graduates of a provisionally approved law school are considered by the ABA to be graduates of an ABA-approved law school and are eligible to sit for the bar exams in most states, including Texas.

Questions may be directed to the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar, American Bar Association, 321 N. Clark Street; Chicago, IL 60654 or call (312) 988-6738. AA/EOE/ADA ©2018 UNT Dallas College of Law

@UNTDallasLaw @UNTDLaw