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The Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program is operated each spring by the law school’s Tax Law Society, a student organization. The TJSL VITA program is an IRS program that provides a valuable community service in the form of free income tax return preparation.

Clients who come to the Thomas Jefferson VITA clinic include students, low-income families, senior citizens and others who can’t afford professional tax services or are unable to complete their own tax forms.

The students who volunteer for this clinic receive training to become IRS-certified, learn how to operate the TaxWise software, how to interview clients effectively and how to assemble a proper tax return.

Items you need to bring to the VITA/TCE Sites to have your tax returns prepared

  • Proof of identification
  • Social Security Cards for you, your spouse and dependents and/or a Social Security Number verification letter issued by the Social Security Administration
  • Birth dates for you, your spouse and dependents on the tax return
  • Wage and earning statement(s) Form W-2, W-2G, 1099-R, from all employers
  • Interest and dividend statements from banks (Forms 1099)
  • A copy of last year's Federal and State returns if available
  • Bank Routing Numbers and Account Numbers for Direct Deposit
  • Total paid for day care provider and the day care provider's tax identifying number (the provider's Social Security Number or the provider's business Employer Identification Number) 
  • To file taxes electronically on a married filing joint tax return, both spouses must be present to sign the required forms. 
  • If you rented your home, the name and address of your landlord or property management company and their phone number. 
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Real World Practical Experience
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Externship Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Externship program offers great opportunities for hands-on legal experience and academic credit at the same time. In fact, our externship program is ranked 18th in the nation based on the ratio of externships the school has placed and the number of full-time students. For total enrollment based on full-time and part-time students, Thomas Jefferson is 5th in the nation. These rankings are based on data from the Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools, 2013 edition. In all, 441 Thomas Jefferson students, representing 61 percent of the student body, participated in externships in 2012.

Placement opportunities are plentiful and varied, ranging from traditional settings such as the United States Attorney’s Office to local biotech corporations to international settings like The Hague. We have externship placement opportunities in law firms of all sizes and practice areas and a number of opportunities at nonprofit, issue-focused organizations.

Students who have successfully completed the Evidence course, or are concurrently enrolled, can become certified law clerks and, thus, be able to make court appearances. Externships provide students an opportunity to develop and hone their research and writing skills. They also work closely with practicing attorneys, and have interactions with clients.

Externship areas of practice include civil litigation, corporate transactions, criminal prosecutions, criminal defense, tax, estate planning, immigration, family law, intellectual property and child welfare and custody.

Students also attend Externship classes and receive individual mentoring.

The Judicial Externship Program

Students participating in the Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Judicial Externship Program have a unique opportunity to work in a judge’s chamber during their law school careers. Students can earn academic credit as they work for a Federal or California State Court Judge.

Students participate in judicial seminars, receive individual mentoring, have the opportunity to research, write and advise the court on a wide variety of legal issues, and observe courtroom proceedings. Students often have the chance to draft judicial opinions and to play a very special role within the judges’ chambers.

Thomas Jefferson students have been placed with federal judges, justices from the California Court of Appeal, the State Superior Court, the Probate Court, and the Family Court.

For more information on externships, students should contact the Externship and Pro Bono Programs Office.

Judybeth Tropp, Esq. jtropp@tjsl.edu, Director of Externships and Pro Bono Programs

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The Pro Bono Honors Program gives student the opportunity to work with underserved populations both in traditional and non-traditional legal settings. Projects and non-profit organizations are in need of law students to help meet their missions. These projects enable law students to gain valuable experience, as well as serve a vital function within the community. All lawyers should be committed to using their unique education and skills to help these underserved populations.

This program is designed for Thomas Jefferson School of Law students to encourage community-based volunteer legal service projects.  The program offers students an opportunity to become involved in the community, enhance their law school experience, and build practical legal skills.

TJSL partners with non-profit organizations, law firms, the San Diego County Bar Association, dozens of legal agencies and other interested entities to accomplish this goal.  We desire to cultivate communal involvement within our own TJSL community by engaging faculty, administration, staff and alumni in our efforts to work within our own region.

These opportunities allow any student who devotes at least 50 hours (not for credit or compensation) of volunteer legal service, specifically to underserved populations, to qualify for TJSL’s Pro Bono Honors Program.  Students receiving Pro Bono Honors will obtain an honors certificate and an honors cord that can be worn at graduation that reflects their commitment to the community.

You may work towards your 50 hours of Pro Bono service throughout you tenure as a law student at TJSL.  You do not have to complete all 50 hours with a single employer.

What type of work is acceptable for the purposes of this program?

  • Work directly related to the delivery of legal services to under-resourced individuals by attorneys of organizations (e. g.  Legal Aid Society, San Diego Volunteer Lawyer Program);
  • Work for an attorney or attorneys on behalf of non-profit organizations, donations to which qualify as deductions under state or federal tax laws (e. g.  San Diego Coastkeeper, environmental Health Coalition, National Wildlife Federation);
  • Work for federal, state, or local government agencies that provide legal services to low-income individuals (e. g.  Public Defender’s Office, Family Law Facilitator);
  • Work for pre-approved student-initiated projects (e. g.  TJSL Clinics, Volunteer Income Tax Assistance program, holocaust litigation, death penalty appeals, etc. )

For more information, please contact the Director of Externships and Pro Bono Programs: Judybeth Tropp, Esq. jtropp@tjsl.edu

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The Thomas Jefferson School of Law Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic provides limited legal assistance, as well as full service legal representation, to the residents and alumni of Veterans Village of San Diego. Veterans Village is a highly successful, residential program that provides housing, substance abuse, mental health, and job training services to formerly homeless veterans who are struggling to regain full participation in society. Areas of concentration include family, consumer and administrative law. Clinic students have primary responsibility for the cases they handle and the clients they represent.

Students are guided in such representation by a faculty member. In addition to their casework, students participate in a weekly class meeting. These classes focus on the substantive law relevant to the students’ cases, the lawyering skills necessary to represent their clients effectively, and the ethical and professional issues that confront lawyers engaged in this type of practice.


View the Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic Brochure


For more information, contact Professor Nicole Heffel, Director of the Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic, at ndambrogi@tjsl.edu.

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Mediation is a growing industry within the legal profession and Thomas Jefferson School of Law is a community leader in immersing students in the art of conflict resolution. Students receive intensive training in mediation and then have the opportunity to gain experience working with real clients and cases in an actual courtroom setting.

Thomas Jefferson has partnered with the San Diego Small Claims Court to create a clinical opportunity that allows students to see "up close and personal" the benefits of alternative approaches to dispute resolution. As mediators in the Small Claims Mediation Program, the students apply the communication, listening and facilitation skills they have acquired in class to assist clients in settling their cases.

More advanced students may be selected to serve in other programs, including the Probate Court Mediation Program, which mediates cases involving guardianships and conservatorships. Following referrals from the Probate Court, participants in this program mediate cases right on the TJSL campus.

The Mediation Program helps students envision novel approaches in which attorneys can help clients move beyond their disputes in creative, constructive and immensely satisfying ways.

Interested students are afforded the opportunity to work with Alternate Dispute Resolution (ADR) mentors so they can learn from lawyers who work in the mediation field.

The Mediation Program is under the direction of Professor Ellen Waldman.

For more information about TJSL’s Mediation Program, please contact us at mediation@tjsl.edu.

Mediation Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law

701 B St. Suite 1150

San Diego, CA 92101

Phone: 619.961.4368

Fax: 619.961.1368

Directions to TJSL

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Principles learned in the classroom applied to working actively with the community
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To understand the theory of law, practice it. Thomas Jefferson School of Law has in-house law clinics for students to work with community members seeking pro bono work on a small scale. Meeting with people seeking answers to legal challenges is one of the best ways to apply what you learn in the classroom to real-life scenarios, whether working on family or veteran issues or interning at local law office or public interest organization. This is one way to find out what segment of the law interests you. Many of these programs allow you to earn academic credit. Students can choose from clinics offering services to veterans, small business entrepreneurs, and those seeking professional mediation. 

Externship Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Externship program offers great opportunities to earn hands-on legal experience and academic credit at the same time. 

Placement opportunities are plentiful and varied, ranging from traditional settings such as the United States Attorney’s Office and the Public Defender to the special opportunities offered by San Diego's local biotech corporations. We have externship placement opportunities in law firms of all sizes and practice areas and a number of opportunities at nonprofit, issue-focused organizations.

Students who have successfully completed or are enrolled in Evidence and Civil Procedure can become certified law clerks and, thus, be able to make court appearances. Externships provide students an opportunity to develop and hone their research and writing skills. They also work closely with practicing attorneys, and have interactions with clients.

Externship areas of practice include civil litigation, corporate transactions, criminal prosecutions, criminal defense, tax, estate planning, immigration, family law, intellectual property and child welfare and custody.

Students also attend Externship classes and receive individual mentoring.

The Judicial Externship Program

Students participating in the Thomas Jefferson School of Law’s Judicial Externship Program have a unique opportunity to work in a judge’s chamber during their law school careers. Students can earn academic credit as they work for a Federal or California State Court Judge.

Students participate in judicial seminars, receive individual mentoring, have the opportunity to research, write and advise the court on a wide variety of legal issues, and observe courtroom proceedings. Students often have the chance to draft judicial opinions and to play a very special role within the judges’ chambers.

Thomas Jefferson students have been placed with federal judges, justices from the California Court of Appeal, the State Superior Court, the Probate Court, and the Family Court.

For more information on externships, students should contact the Director of the Externship and Pro Bono Programs, Professor Judybeth Tropp, jtropp@tjsl.edu.

Mediation Program

Thomas Jefferson School of Law is a community leader in immersing students in the art of conflict resolution. Students receive intensive training in mediation and then have the opportunity to gain experience working with real clients and cases in an actual courtroom setting.

Pro Bono Program

The Pro Bono Honors Program encourages community-based volunteer legal services projects working with underserved populations both in traditional and non-traditional legal settings.

Small Claims Self-Help Workshop

The Small Claims Self-Help Workshop provides free limited legal assistance for low- to moderate-income individuals and businesses with small claim issues.

Tax Clinic

The student-led Tax Law Society operates the Volunteer Income Tax Assistance (VITA) program of the IRS each spring and offers free income tax return preparation.

Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic

The Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic provides limited legal assistance, as well as full service legal representation, to the residents and alumni of Veterans Village of San Diego, a successful, residential program that provides housing, substance abuse, mental health, and job training services to formerly homeless veterans.

Small Business Law Center

The Small Business Law Center supports community economic development in San Diego County by assisting entrepreneurs, artists, inventors, small businesses and non-profit organizations that do not have the financial means to hire an attorney. The Center includes:

  1. Nonprofit + Business Law Clinic
  2. Patent Clinic
  3. Trademark Clinic The patent and trademark clinics are certified by the United States Patent and Trademark Office
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The Juris Doctor program at Thomas Jefferson School of Law offers a rich variety of courses, concentration areas and clinical programs in addition to our special Academic Centers, which have their own certificate programs.

Our academic programs are designed to train you to be an attorney but also to offer you career-enhancing experiences that will enrich your professional and personal life.

While earning your J.D., you can get actual hands-on courtroom experience, work with real clients, perform pro bono and community-service work, participate in amazingly varied externships, study law overseas and travel the country with our competition teams.

Experiential Learning Programs

The law school provides a wealth of experiential learning opportunities, so that you can get real-life experience before you graduate.  Our clinics include the Mediation Clinic, Tax Clinic, Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic, and Small Business Law Center.  Our students also work with experienced attorneys and organizations thorugh our robust Externship Program, and serve the community through our Pro Bono lawyering program.  

Legal Writing

Our legal writing program is highly-ranked and one of the first in the nation to be taught primarily by tenure and tenure-track professors.

Criminal Law, IP, Entertainment & Sports Law Fellowship Programs

Thomas Jefferson School of Law offers exciting, enriching fellowship programs for students interested in Criminal Law, Intellectual Property (IP), Entertainment & Sports Law.

Academic Specialties

Thomas Jefferson's faculty have diverse interests and practice backgrounds, supporting the Law School's diverse academic specialities.  For example, students may specialize in Criminal Law, Intellectual Property Law, Entertainment and Sports Law, Legal Practice, Mediation, or International Law.

Study Abroad / Exchange Programs

One of the most exciting opportunities at Thomas Jefferson School of Law is the option to participate in our Study Abroad programs. Thomas Jefferson has recently offered summer study programs in Hangzhou, China (Summer 2019) and Nice, France (Summer 2020), as well as exchange opportunities with law schools in Europe and Canada.

 

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Our curriculum is one of our greatest strengths and ensures that students graduate with a broad legal education while specializing in distinct programs of study. The diverse array of elective courses fits almost all legal career aspirations.

For detailed information about our curriculum, please visit our lists of course:

You will find guidance about the courses you might take, and extremely helpful FAQs, in the Planning Your Law School Career section of the Student Handbook.

If you have questions or need more information, please contact our Associate Dean for Academic Affairs or our Assistant Dean for Student Affairs.

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Policy & Jurisprudence: Education, Employment, the Environment & Land Use, and Medicine
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Thomas Jefferson School of Law offers an enriched and dynamic specialty that focuses on policy and interdisciplinary theories of legal jurisprudence. TJSL professors possess enormous expertise as former policymakers on the national and international world stage in a variety of fields including in the areas of employment, economics, education, the environment and land use, media and film, the arts, science, civil rights, religion, psychology, philosophy, medicine, bioethics and more. Whether it is offering path breaking congressional testimony on Capitol Hill, writing new legislation in the state halls of government, or challenging the fundamental tenets of legal doctrine from a variety of interdisciplinary perspectives, TJSL faculty are on the forefront of legal reforms and critical discourse in their respective fields of expertise. Our faculty challenge students to fundamentally re-think doctrinal and theoretical assumptions underpinning the law and the lawyering process itself filtered through the prism of socio-legal constraints. Students critically examine how the intended and unintended costs of rules and norms have broadly affected society and modern legal reforms. Students also have the opportunity to work closely with faculty through clinics, externships and directed studies on cutting edge issues of governmental regulation, policy development and scholarly workshops that assemble some of the nation's brightest thinkers and lawmakers.


Courses

Bioethics Policy

Civil Justice Seminar

Civil Rights

Critical Race Studies

Education Policy

Employment Law

Employment Discrimination

Environmental Law

Gender Equality

Health Care Liability

Law & Literature

K-12 & Higher Education Policy

Law & Film

Law & Religion

Law & Medicine

Law & Psychology

Jurisprudence

Medicine & Bioethics

Natural Resources Law

Sexuality Gender & the Law

Wildlife & Marine Life Law


Professor Susan Bisom-Rapp (Employment Discrimination; Employment Law; Globalization and the Workplace, International Labor & Employment Law; Labor Law) is a widely cited expert on employment discrimination and international and comparative workplace law. Her scholarship examines the effects on civil rights enforcement of employers' compliance efforts and attorneys' litigation strategies, and has influenced the disciplines of sociology and psychology. Her co-authored casebook, The Global Workplace: International and Comparative Employment Law - Cases and Materials (Cambridge University Press, 2007) (co-author with Roger Blanpain, William R. Corbett, Hilary K. Josephs and Michael J. Zimmer) is the first law school text on international and comparative employment law.

Professor Joy Delman (Health Care Liability; Reproductive Justice; Law and Medicine; Comparative Law, Medicine and Bioethics) has a varied background in civil litigation with an emphasis in medical malpractice. Professor Delman also served as counsel to a medical products corporation and is a member of the American College of Legal Medicine. She has authored "The Use and Misuse of Physician Extenders: Aiding and Abetting the Unauthorized Practice of Medicine" in the Journal of Legal Medicine.

Professor Julie Greenberg (Sexuality, Gender and the Law; Women and the Law; Comparative Family Law) is an internationally recognized expert on the legal issues relating to gender, sex, sexual identity and sexual orientation. Her path-breaking work on gender identity has been cited by a number of state and federal courts, as well as courts in other countries and has been instrumental in changing the legal definitions of male and female. She recently published the book Intersexuality and the Law:Why Sex Matters

Professor Marybeth Herald (Law and Psychology) has published articles exploring the legal and political relationship of the United States territories, the First Amendment and related gender issues, including "A Bedroom of One's Own: Law and Sexual Privacy After Lawrence v. Texas" in the Yale Journal of Law & Feminism.

Professor Maureen Markey (Jurisprudence; Law & Literature) was a partner at Mulvaney, Kahan & Barry in San Diego and taught at the University of San Diego School of Law before joining the faculty at Thomas Jefferson.  Her seminars focus on the role of argumentation and narrative in legal theory and jurisprudence. She has also written several article on law and religion, including "The Price of Landlord's 'Free' Exercise of Religion: Tenant's Right to Discrimination-Free Housing and Privacy" in the Fordham Urban Law Journal.

Professor David Steinberg (Law & Religion) has served as co-chair of the Association of American Law Schools Section on Civil Rights, and has served on the Executive Committee of the Association's Section on Law and Religion. His law & religion scholarship includes "Religious Exemptions as Affirmative Action" in the Emory Law Review and "Children and Spiritual Healing: Having Faith in Free Exercise" in the Notre Dame Law Review.

Professor Ellen Waldman (Bioethics Policy; Therapeutic Jurisprudence) was a fellow at the Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy in Charlottesville, Virginia. The following year she served as a fellow at the medical ethics department at the University of Virginia Medical School and directed a grant awarded by the Virginia Institute for the Humanities to educate hospital staff and patients about patient rights and principles of biomedical ethics. Her scholarship includes "Mediation at the End of Life: Getting Beyond the Limits of the Talking Cure" in the Journal of Dispute Resolution.

Associate Professor Madeline Kass (Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law, Wildlife & Marine Life Law) practiced law for close to a decade in the Seattle offices of Preston Gates & Ellis (now K&L Gates) and Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe where her practice focused primarily in the areas of land use and environmental compliance and litigation. Prior to entering private practice, she conducted immunology research at Harvard Medical School.  She currently serves on the Executive Committee of the AALS Natural Resources Section, on the Editorial Board of the ABA’s National Resources & Environment publication, as a Vice-Chair of the ABA Endangered Species Committee, and as a faculty advisor for the TJSL Environmental Law Society. She has also served on the Editorial Board of the Washington State Bar Association Environmental and Land Use Law Newsletter.

Associate Professor Leah Christensen (Legal Education Pedagogy; Educational Policy) focuses on empirical legal research including studies on legal education, and has presented at conferences sponsored by the American Association of Law Schools (AALS), the Institute of Law School Teaching (ILST), the Education Law Association and the Law School Admissions Council (LSAC). Her scholarship includes "Sticks, Stones And Schoolyard Bullies: Restorative Justice," and "Mediation And A New Way To Approach Conflict Resolution In Our Schools,"  in the Nevada Law Journal.

Associate Professor Julie Cromer Young (Law and Film; Lawyers and American Film) co-organized the Seventh Annual Women and the Law Conference Virtual Women: Gender Issues in Intellectual Property and focuses on law and media issues in her scholarship, including "How on Earth Terrestrial Laws Can Protect Geospatial Data" in the Journal of Space Law.

Associate Professor Maurice R. Dyson (K-12 & Higher Education Policy; Civil Rights; Critical Race Studies) was a Special Projects team attorney for the U.S. Department of Education Office for Civil Rights (OCR) and has also served as the national chairperson of the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Section on Education Law. Among his recent scholarship, he has written the first ever education law-critical race theory reader entitled Our Promise: Achieving Educational Equity for America's Children, Carolina Academic Press (Maurice R. Dyson, Daniel B. Weddle, eds.).

Associate Professor Kaimipono David Wenger (Critical Race Studies) has written several articles including "Nullificatory Juries" (with David A. Hoffman) in the Wisconsin Law Review and "Slavery as a Takings Clause Violation" in the American University Law Review, and "Causation and Attenuation in the Slavery Reparations Debate" in the University of San Francisco Law Review.

Associate Professor Rebecca Lee (Employment Law & Discrimination; Gender Equality) writes in the areas of employment discrimination and workplace policy, with a focus on issues of gender equality, how gender and race differences shape institutional norms, the role of leadership within organizations as well as the relationship between conceptions of equality and diversity. Her scholarship includes "The Organization as a Gendered Entity: A Response to Professor Schultz's The Sanitized Workplace" in the Columbia Journal of Gender and Law.

Associate Professor Luz Herrera (Civil Justice Seminar) focuses on efforts to close the access gap to legal services by promoting self-help centers, on-line legal services, pro-bono work, unbundling programs, prepaid systems and other services to underprivileged and middle income communities in San Diego County. Before entering academia, she operated a law firm in Compton, California, serving the underprivileged community. She has written "Reflections of a Community Lawyer" in The Modern American.

Adjunct Professor of Law Wayne Rosenbaum (Land Use Planning, Water Law) is special counsel to Foley & Lardner concentrating on environmental issues, including the development of cost effective compliance strategies for municipalities and industries regulated under the storm water provisions of the Clean Water Act.

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Legal Practice Specialty: Litigation, Transactions & Alternative Dispute Resolution
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At its core, law school teaches students to research, write and argue like a lawyer. Thomas Jefferson School of Law's faculty and professional library staff take great pride in teaching these critical skills. The law school's legal writing program includes full-time faculty teaching legal writing and reasoning in the first semester and, in the second semester, experienced practitioners teaching persuasive brief writing. This program provides students with more credit hours for their written work than almost any other law school in the nation. This means TJSL students have the unique opportunity to spend more time developing the fundamental skills of legal reasoning, research, and writing during their first year. In addition, after the first year, every student (1) completes a substantial paper, brief, or series of shorter writing assignments, under the direct supervision of a faculty member; and (2) participates in a least one practical skills course such as trial practice, mediation, negotiation, appellate advocacy, contract drafting, client counseling, and negotiation. Each of these courses is taught by a faculty member with vast experience both as teachers and as practicing lawyers who regularly use the skills that they teach. Our professional librarians offer multiple sections of advanced legal research and research "boot camps," enabling upper level students to hone this critical skill. And law review students receive special instruction in scholarly writing and may work directly with a professor on a one-to-one basis in writing their law review notes.

Beyond these basic skills, the law school provides a rich array of opportunities to gain practical experience in carefully supervised environments, including skills-based classes, clinical programs, and competition teams. TJSL offers three clinics covering the spectrum from litigation to transactional work to ADR.

Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic (VLAC): The VLAC consists of both a fieldwork and a classroom component. In the fieldwork component, students provide civil legal assistance to the residents of Veterans Village of San Diego (VVSD). VVSD is a well-respected and highly successful transitional program for homeless veterans. VLAC students meet and consult with VVSD residents with regard to virtually any type of legal problem. Students then provide full service legal representation to VVSD residents and alumni in a variety of areas, including: family law (child support and visitation, dissolutions of marriage, guardianships); administrative law (Social Security, SSI, VA benefits, military discharge upgrades, Food Stamps); offender reentry (probation modifications, expungements); and limited criminal representation. Students are certified to provide direct client representation through the California State Bar’s Practical Training for Law Students program. The students are supervised in their fieldwork by Professor Steve Berenson (a tenured faculty member and licensed California attorney), and a clinic attorney. 

Mediation Program: This program enhances students’ dispute resolution competency by affording an opportunity to mediate small claims court cases and creating networking opportunities with seasoned ADR professionals. Students learn mediation skills through an intensive 40-hour introductory training that combines traditional lecture with role-playing, simulation, and other experiential exercises. The students then use those skills to resolve disputes on a supervised basis through local court mediation programs. This practical internship is supplemented by an Advanced Mediation seminar that links theory with practice and offers an opportunity to reflect on, critique, and receive feedback on the dispute resolution experience at court.

Small Business Law Center: This program affords students the opportunity to assist individuals and small businesses with transactional work ranging from corporate formation to trademark licensing. The goals of the Small Business Law Center are to: (1) provide upper division students with greater opportunities for practical skill development; and (2) serve the unmet legal needs of the local community of low- and moderate-income entrepreneurs, small businesses, and community-based non-profits that cannot otherwise hire lawyers at market rates. Under the supervision of Professor Luz Herrera, third-year law students represent clients on a range of legal services, including contract review, drafting and negotiation, helping clients navigate regulatory requirements, particularly in the areas of licensing and employment, and all aspects of entity formation. The initial focus of the clinic is on community economic development and plans to grow in areas such as intellectual property, tax, and estate planning.

Field Placement:  TJSL’s Field Placement (commonly known as the Externship) Program was recently ranked 5th in the nation for placement of full time students. Participating students take part in both class instruction and supervised field work. The program is overseen by the School’s Director of Externship and Pro Bono programs, Judybeth Tropp. Placements include positions with local prosecutors and public defender offices as well as experienced attorneys who specialize in family law, transactional law, tax, estate planning, personal injury, immigration, complex litigation, real estate law, corporate, and intellectual property practice. 


Other externship opportunities have included:

  • Casa Cornelia (a not-for-profit where among other services, attorneys work with refugees on asylum petitions); The Family Law Facilitator (a not-for-profit attorney run program assisting clients with family law issues);
  • The Family Justice Center (a project of the local City Attorney’s Office, where students work with clients who are seeking restraining orders and other legal services regarding issues surrounding domestic violence);
  • Elder Law (a not-for-profit run by attorneys providing legal services for clients sixty five and older);
  • The Employee Rights Center (a not-for-profit assisting clients who have been improperly dismissed from their work and clients in wage disputes with their employers; students also represent clients at administrative hearings); 
  • The delinquency and dependency branches of the Public Defender’s and the Alternate Public Defender’s Offices;
  • Bio-tech firms’ internal legal departments;
  • The San Diego Volunteer Lawyers Program;
  • The Legal Aid Society;
  • The YWCA Domestic Violence Program;
  • The California Innocence Project; and Housing Opportunities Collaborative (a not-for-profit housing collaborative working on housing issues, property rights, and foreclosure and loan modifications).

TJSL also has three active competition teams in the areas of trial practice (Mock Trial Team), brief writing and oral arguments (Moot Court Society), and negotiation, mediation, and arbitration (Alternative Dispute Resolution Team). Teams travel throughout the country representing the law school that allows them to build practice skills as they learn as part of a supervised team.

The TJSL Library also serves as an invaluable resource for students. Libraries, we often think, are all about books, and the TJSL library has over 250,000 volumes and volume equivalents as well as a vast array of on-line database access. This collection covers every imaginable need a law student might have, from course work, to law clerking jobs, to entertainment (check out the popular reading materials and legal themed movies). Of course, wireless internet access is available throughout the library. Students can even search the catalog and access the databases over the internet from their home or anywhere else in the world. For law students, however, the library's collection of books and on-line resources may be less important than the availability of professional library staff to assist students with their research. The TJSL library is open 7 days, and 115 hours, per week. For 88 of those hours, at least one professional research librarian is available to assist students. Both of these figures rank number 1 among California law schools, and 16th and 17th nationwide.


Courses

Advanced Legal Research

Appellate Advocacy

Civil Procedure & California Civil Procedure

Contract Drafting

Field Placement

Law Practice Management

Legal Writing I & Legal Writing II

Mediation

Mock Trial

Moot Court

Negotiation: Theory & Skills

Pre-trial Practice

Solo Practice

Supreme Court Advocacy

Small Business Law Clinic

Trial Practice & Advanced Trial Practice

Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic

Many substantive elective classes building legal practice components into their curriculum.


TJSL faculty teaching skills classes, and our professional librarians, all enjoy interacting with students outside of class. Our open door policy is genuine and intended to ensure that each student gains a firm grounding in basic legal practice skills necessary to successfully enter the legal profession.

Professor Ellen Waldman (Mediation) founded and supervises the school's mediation program, which affords students an opportunity to mediate disputes in small claims court. Prior to joining TJSL she clerked for the Honorable Myron Bright of the Eighth Circuit in Fargo, North Dakota, and practiced law in Washington, D.C., where she received mediation training. She was subsequently awarded a scholarship in 1990 to pursue an LL.M. in mediation and served as a fellow at the Institute of Law, Psychiatry, and Public Policy in Charlottesville, Virginia and at the medical ethics department at the University of Virginia Medical School. Professor Waldman speaks, trains and publishes in the areas of mediation and medical ethics.

Professor William Slomanson (California Civil Procedure, Civil Procedure) served as an attorney for a Los Angeles insurance defense firm before joining the Thomas Jefferson School of Law faculty. Prior to law school, Professor Slomanson served in the Navy and received the Navy Achievement Medal. In 1992, he was elected editor of the American Society of International Law’s section on the United Nations Decade of International Law, a position which he still holds, and served as chair of the section from 1995 to 2006. He was appointed to the California Law Revision Commission’s Civil Procedure Panel of Experts. In 2002, he began teaching in Kosovo each summer, where he is now a Visiting Professor at the Pristina University. In 2006-2007, he lectured in Moscow, Budapest and Istanbul. In Fall 2007, he was appointed to serve as a Corresponding Editor for the American Society of International Law’s International Legal Materials. He has published extensively in the fields of civil procedure and international law, having written eleven books.

Professor David Steinberg (Supreme Court Advocacy) has been teaching for nearly 20 years at the Thomas Jefferson and Pittsburgh law schools. An innovative teacher, Prof. Steinberg has long incorporated clinical components into his civil procedure, criminal procedure, and civil rights class. His new course in Supreme Court advocacy will provide opportunities for students to perfect their oral argument skills while learning the process of the U.S. Supreme Court. He has published more than 20 articles on topics ranging from civil procedure to the religion clauses to the history of the Fourth Amendment.

Professor Steve Berenson (Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic) a national expert on clinical education founded and now supervises TJSL's Veterans Legal Assistance Clinic, which provides a range of legal services to veterans living in San Diego communities. Following graduation from law school (where he served as Trial Operations Director of the Harvard Defenders), Professor Berenson clerked for Justice Edith W. Fine of the Massachusetts Appeals Court. He then spent more than five years as an Assistant Massachusetts Attorney General, where he focused on civil litigation in the areas of administrative, constitutional and consumer protection law. During that time, Professor Berenson also served as a Supreme Court Fellow with the National Association of Attorneys General. He then spent two years as a teaching fellow in Harvard Law School's Lawyering Program, and four years at Nova Southeastern University's Shepard Broad Law Center, teaching in the school's Lawyering Skills and Values Program and its Children and Family Law Clinic. Before running the clinic, he taught legal writing at TJSL.

Associate Professor Ilene Durst (Director Legal Writing II Program, Legal Writing I & II) focuses her scholarship on language and narrative theory, with particular application to appellate advocacy, immigration law and the literary representation of the legal culture. Before joining TJSL she clerked for the Supreme Court Appellate Division, Second Department and had extensive litigation and immigration law experience with law firms and public service organizations in New York. She currently directs the adjunct faculty teaching the second semester persuasive writing course.

Associate Dean for Academic Affairs Linda Keller (Legal Writing I) served as a clerk and supervisor in the Legal Research Office of the Connecticut Judicial Department and later taught legal writing for four years at the University of Miami School of Law, where she also served as Fellow of the Center for the Study of Human Rights, before joining TJSL.

Professor Ben Templin (Legal Writing I, Contract Drafting) practiced corporate law at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, representing venture capital funds as investor's counsel. Before joining TJSL he taught Legal Methods to undergraduates at the University of California, Berkeley, and his web site (www.LawNerds.com) provides instruction in exam writing techniques to first-year law students. Before going to law school, Professor Templin was a director of online services at Ziff-Davis Publishing Company and editor-in-chief of MacGuide, a Macintosh computing magazine.

Associate Professor Claire Wright (Legal Writing I) was a law clerk for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit, where she worked primarily for then-Judge Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Before coming to TJSL, she was also a partner at the international law firm of Baker & McKenzie, where she practiced both real estate and international trade law, and the consulting firm of Ernst & Young LLP, where she directed the firm's World Trade Organization (WTO) Center, and advised a large number of countries and companies regarding WTO issues. She is a member of a committee of the American Law Institute, and has worked on a variety of human rights matters for Amnesty International.

Associate Professor Sandra Rierson (Legal Writing I) clerked for the Honorable Richard A. Gadbois, in the U.S. District Court in Los Angeles and subsequently practiced law with Quinn Emanuel Urquhart Oliver & Hedges, also in Los Angeles, where she became a partner in 1998.

Assistant Dean of Academic Success and Bar Preparation Leah Christensen (Legal Writing I) clerked for Justice William A. Bablitch of the Wisconsin Supreme Court. She then practiced in the areas of medical malpractice, environmental law, and public education law. She has previously taught legal writing at the University of St. Thomas School of Law and the University of Wisconsin Law School and is recognized nationally as an expert in law student learning. She has conducted extensive research in the areas of legal reading and its correlation to law school success; law students with learning disabilities; goal orientations and its relationship to law school success; and cognitive strategies to enhance law school performance.

Associate Professor Luz Herrera (Small Business Contracts Drafting; Civil Justice Seminar; Seminar on Community Economic Development) has worked at the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development on empowerment zones and at the Southwest Voter Registration Education Project, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, and the Los Angeles City Attorney's Office. Before coming to Thomas Jefferson, she opened her own practice serving the under-privileged community in Compton, California. She is director of TJSL's clinic that provides legal services to underprivileged communities in San Diego County, The Small Business Law Center.

Assistant Professor of Lawyering Jeff Slattery (Legal Writing I & II; IP Licensing Drafting) has scholarly interests in the area of rhetoric theory and practice. He has practiced intellectual property law and taught substantive courses in law and business to artists, musicians, authors, and filmmakers, including engagements with California Lawyers for the Arts and the University of Southern California.

Visiting Assistant Professor Priscilla Vargas Wrosch (Legal Writing I & II) clerked for the Honorable Magistrate Judge James F. Stiven in the United States District Court for the Southern District of California and practiced law with Skadden Arps Slate Meagher & Flom, LLP and later Bernstein Litowitz Berger & Grossmann, LLP, where she practiced in the areas of Corporate Restructuring and Securities Fraud Litigation.

Adjunct Professor & Director, Clinical Skills Training Program Paul Spiegelman (Negotiation Theory and Skills, Moot Court, Pre-Trial Practice) has been teaching legal practice skills for three decades and regularly handles death penalty appeals to the California Supreme Court. Prof. Spiegelman is the director of the law school's highly successful Moot Court and Alternative Dispute Resolution teams.

Adjunct Professor Michael Begovich (Trial Practice, Advanced Trial Practice) is a Deputy Public Defender for the County of San Diego.

Adjunct Professor Julie D. Cobalt (Introduction to Mediation) received her law degree from California Western School of Law. She also has a masters degree from Monterey Institute of International Studies (summa cum laude), and her bachelor’s degree from Hamline University. She has been a mediation trainer with the National Conflict Resolution Center and with the National Conflict Resolution Center, San Diego Superior Court, as well as San Diego City Attorney. She is also engaged in private practice with an emphasis in civil litigation.

Adjunct Professor Zuzana Colaprete (Accounting for Lawyers, Federal Income Taxation, Estate Planning & Taxation, Estate & Gift Tax, Accounting for Lawyers, and Trusts) received her Masters in Law Degree in Taxation from the University of San Diego School of Law; her MSBA in Accounting, San Diego State University and her B.A. from Hofstra University. She is a Certified Public Accountant and a former tax attorney with the District Counsel Office of the Internal Revenue Service. Previously employed with PricewaterhouseCoopers, she is currently in private practice with an emphasis in all levels of I.R.S. representation, tax planning and estate planning.

Adjunct Professor Karen Gallagher (Legal Writing II) is a TJSL graduate and a pro se clerk at the U.S. District Court in San Diego.

Adjunct Professor Harry Zanville (Negotiations Theory & Skills) received his law degree at the University of Toledo and his bachelor’s degree at Westminster College. He has been in private practice and also served as a former consultant to the U.S. Department of Justice.

Adjunct Professor Chris Ramey teaches Advanced Civil Discovery Practice in California.

Director JudyBeth Tropp (Judicial Internship & Clinical Education Seminars) received her law degree from Fordham University School of Law and her bachelors degree from Smith College (cum laude). She is a former assistant district attorney with the Appeals Bureau in Brooklyn, New York and former deputy public defender, with the County of Los Angeles.

Associate Director (Bar Studies) Mike Neal teaches Lawyering Skills; Pre-Trial Civil Practice.

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