Thursday, January 31, 2013
Law School Survey of Student Engagement
Want to do well in law school? Try some extra face time with professors and fellow students.
A large-scale survey of law students found that those who interacted more with faculty members and classmates experienced benefits including keener critical and analytical thinking, writing and research skills, and ethical development.
That was one finding of the Law School Survey of Student Engagement, an annual study of law student satisfaction conducted by Indiana University's Center for Postsecondary Research, which surveyed more than 25,000 students at 81 schools.
The researchers found that students benefited from a variety of faculty interactions, including in-class discussions and timely feedback on their work. "Our analysis reveals that interaction with faculty relates significantly to students' perceptions of their own gains in both academic and personal dimensions," the authors wrote.
Not only did these interactions help students develop key legal skills; they also helped them earn better grades. Students who reported more interaction with their professors tended to be more satisfied with their law school experience.
To read the complete article, click on the link below:
http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/PubArticleNLJ.jsp?id=1202584415825&slreturn=20130031092429
Boys and Girls Club of Central Appalachia ASL Fundraiser
Don't forget to stop by the Lion's Lounge today and place your Gumbo order cooked by ASL's very own Professor Bowers! Only $5.00 (bread and drink included). All proceeds benefit the Boys and Girls Club of Central Appalachia. Tickets will be sold until Thursday, Feb. 7 2013. The Gumbo will be
served on February 12, from 5:00 to 7:00 in the Booth Center. Contact Sabrina Mullins at smullins15@my.asl.edu with questions.
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Meet the ASL Development Office Staff : Janie Castle
Janie Castle is the Director of Career Services and Alumni Relations. She works closely with Institutional Development to engage our almost 1000 living alumni. As a 2010 graduate of ASL, she is uniquely aware of the needs of both ASL students and alumni.
Meet the ASL Development Office Staff : Tonya Moore
Tonya Moore is the Secretary to Career Services and Development & Events Coordinator. Her favorite thing about working at ASL is the pleasant environment and friendly interaction with co-workers and students.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Friday, January 25, 2013
ASL's Google Community Calendar
Do you know about ASL's Google Community Calendar? To add your events, email Tonya at tmoore@asl.edu . You will need to include the date, time, location, and a description of the event. These can be local community events or events at the law school.
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Wednesday, January 23, 2013
ASL Environmental Law Society Meeting: Monday, January 28th
Announcement: The ASL Environmental Law Society will meet this upcoming
Monday, January 28th. We meet every other Monday after that. Meeting
time is 12:30 PM in room 223.
We will be providing lunch for members and discussing the
events ELS will sponsor through out the semester. Also, ELS provides a
great vehicle for 1L's to become involved in the community, gain community
service, and converse about the environmental industry. Contact Justin Crawley at jcrawley14@my.asl.edu with any questions.
Six ASL 2L Students Receive Paid Summer Internships with West Virginia Public Defender Services
Congratulations
to the following 2L students who received paid summer internships with West
Virginia Public Defender Services: Steven Turner, Kolbe Page, Kenyatta Thorpe,
Lauren Shadrick, Jessica Miller, and Matthew Roohollahi. WVPDS recruits
at ASL during the fall semester each year, and has commended ASL on the quality
and work ethic of our students. The WVPDS summer internship program
allows students to represent indigent clients in a supervised practice in one
of 10 to 12 Public Defender offices throughout West Virginia. Interns practice
under a Rule 9 Practice Certificate (Third-Year Practice Certificate) and
handle court cases.
ASL's Melanie Ghaw to be published in Buffalo Environmental Law Journal
Melanie Ghaw, a third-year student at the Appalachian School of Law, will be published in the Buffalo Environmental Law Journal. Her forthcoming article, Animal Farm Reality: The First Amendment Struggle to Reveal the Frightening Truth Behind Industrial Farm Animal Production, explores the detrimental effects of industrial farm animal production on public health, the environment, and consumer rights. It further suggests certain bills and statutes, particularly food disparagement laws and ag-gag bills, are unconstitutional as an infringement on the First Amendment right to freedom of speech and press.
Melanie Ghaw is currently working as a research assistant to Professor Douglas McKechnie, Professor Alan Oxford, and Professor Kendall Isaac. Additionally, she is a work-study for Career Services. Melanie Ghaw is the Articles Editor on the Executive Board of the Appalachian Journal of Law.
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
ASL Natural Resources Law Program
ASL Natural Resources Law Program
The Appalachian School of Law is continuing to bolster its offerings in Natural Resources. ASL's location in southwestern Virginia, the heart of the Appalachian coal-producing region, makes an emphasis on the topic a natural fit.
Mission
The ASL Natural Resources Law Program’s mission is to train attorneys to navigate the increasingly complex world of natural resources law in terms of energy production, conservation, and improving sustainability. At the center of this mission is ASL’s commitment to offer a place for rational discussion, intelligent debate, and collaboration to foster cutting-edge programs and innovative scholarship with the ultimate goal to make students more effective and scientifically grounded policymakers and advocates.Curriculum
ASL offers several Natural Resources upper-level classes for students interested in Natural Resources and Environmental law. The seminar in Natural Resources examines the specialized property rules governing estates in natural resources, the correlative rights of surface and mineral owners, and the rights to explore, mine and extract, develop, and transport natural resources, with primary emphasis on "hard" minerals. A seminar in Environmental Law allows students to examine selected topics in the law governing the protection of air, water, and land from pollution. A practicum in Sustainable Energy focuses on the legal implications of policies and technologies that seek to minimize carbon emissions in the development and delivery of energy. Additionally, ASL recently approved the development of a class in Coal and Mineral Law.Partnership with Virginia Tech
Interested students may earn a joint Certificate of Graduate Study in Natural Resources from ASL and the Virginia Tech College of Natural Resources. Students at both schools can take a combination of courses at both institutions both traditionally and via distance learning. Students must take 12 credit hours of approved coursework to earn the certificate.Distinguished Professorship in Real Estate Law
Virginia Supreme Court Justice Elizabeth McClanahan became ASL's first Street Memorial Distinguished Visitor in Real Estate Law. McClanahan, an expert in natural gas, coal and oil issues, grew up in Buchanan County. She practiced law with the Law Offices of PennStuart in Abingdon and was a recognized expert in real estate law, regularly lecturing, writing, and publishing on various related topics. She was the 1994 El Paso fellow at the University of Colorado Natural Resources Law Center. She served as Virginia's chief deputy attorney general prior to the Virginia General Assembly appointing her to the bench and served eight years on the Virginia Court of Appeals. The General Assembly elevated her to the Virginia Supreme Court this year, making her only the fourth female justice to serve on the Court.Appalachian Natural Resources Law Journal
ASL's Natural Resources Law Journal is a student-formed, student-run, faculty-advised organization dedicated to educating students, practitioners, and the surrounding community concerning legal issues related to natural resources. ANRLJ published its first issue in 2007.Recent Graduates
ASL is proud to boast successful alumni who are working in Natural Resources law. Among them is Troy Nichols '04, who recently joined Alpha Coal Sales Co. LLC, a subsidiary of Alpha Natural Resources, Inc., as corporate counsel. Alpha is a Fortune 500 company and ranks as the world's fifth-largest supplier of coal and third-largest supplier of metallurgical coal. Before joining Alpha, Troy practiced at Wyatt, Tarrant & Combs in Lexington, Kentucky, where he served as a senior associate and was a member of the firm's Natural Resources & Environmental Service Team. Blair N. Wood '10 practices with the Creekmore Law Firm in Blacksburg, Va. The firm's business litigation practice helps in the defense of oil, gas, and coalbed methane litigation across Virginia and West Virginia. Wood was president of the Energy and Mineral Law Society while at ASL and graduated first in her class.Current and Former ASL Employers
Alpha Coal Sales | Mountian Institute |
Alpha Natural Resources | Noble Energy |
British Petroleum | Penn Stuart & Eskridge |
CNX Land Resources | Rhino Energy |
Creekmore Law Firm | Shell Oil |
Environmental Protection Agency | Steptoe & Johnson |
Equitable Resources | Teco Coal Corporation |
EQT Production Company | VA Dept of Environmental Quality |
Frontier Energy Group | Western Land Services |
Jackson Kelly | Wyatt, Tarrant and Combs |
Jones & Associates | York Professional Land Services |
Friday, January 18, 2013
Trees for America Campaign
The Arbor Day Foundation has advertised a Trees for
America Campaign. They will supply two of the following types of
trees for a $10 fee: white dogwoods, flowering crabapples, hawthorns,
redbuds, & golden rain trees. Dean McGough would like to reimburse
the $10 fee to the first ten in the ASL Community who participate in this
program and become a member of ADF. These trees will be planted around
the ASL campus this spring.
If you are willing to participate in this program, please contact Brenda Oxford at boxford@asl.edu or call 276- 935-4349 ext. 1231
Opening Statement Competition
The Criminal Law Society will be hosting the 2nd Annual
Opening Statement Competition on Wednesday, January 30th at 5 P.M. This
competition gives those involved the opportunity to craft and deliver an
opening statement for a short criminal problem. Last year there were quite a
few competitors, and we hope this year will be even more successful. With all
of that being said, in order to compete we suggest that you attend the
informational session on Thursday, January 24th at 5 P.M. in Room 226.
At this meeting, the rules of the competition and
the problem will be introduced. Because so much information will be provided at
this meeting and you will have less than a week to prepare, I strongly suggest
attendance at the Jan. 24th session. If you can't be there but would still like
to compete, you need to email me at nogle13@my.asl.edu so I can give you the
rules and problem.
The top three competitors will win trophies for their
efforts. The competition will be judged by our own faculty and food will be
served. Guests are permitted. Thank you all for your time and we hope to see
you next week on the 24th at 5 P.M. in Room 226 for the information session.
Thursday, January 17, 2013
ASL Make The Princeton Review's Best 168 Law Schools
The Princeton Review reports:
Appalachian School of Law Students Say...
The Appalachian School of Law is a young, private institution, organized in 1994 and given full accreditation from the American Bar Association in 2006. The traditional-looking campus is very beautiful and the library is “new.” Wireless Internet access is available and, in recent years, “The technology aspect of the Law School has shown a significa...The Appalachian School of Law is a young, private institution, organized in 1994 and was awarded full accreditation from the American Bar Association in 2006. The traditional-looking campus is very beautiful and the library is “new.” Wireless Internet access is available and, in recent years, “The technology aspect of the Law School has shown a significant improvement.”Students report that “trial advocacy training,” “moot court programs,” and other “practical courses” are “first rate” at ASL. The mock trial team “has trounced big names” in national competitions. “The law school’s emphasis on practical legal skills has thoroughly prepared me for everyday situations in the general practice of law,” says a 3L. “I will graduate and know what to do in a courtroom besides espouse constitutional theory with opposing counsel at lunch.” Appalachian also “distinguishes itself from the majority of other law schools by requiring 150 hours of community service.” A summer externship is also “required of all first-year students.” “The community-service requirement promotes student involvement in law school organizations, benefits the community, and strengthens the reputations of both ASL and the legal profession in general,” explains one student. “The summer externship program provides all rising 2Ls with the opportunity to apply the knowledge they gained from first-year classes to real-life situations.” There is also a “mandatory alternative dispute resolution requirement,” though the school seems keener on this than the students.
The “knowledgeable” and “very approachable” professors here are “down-to-earth people who have a wide variety of legal experience” and “extensive practical and theoretical knowledge of the subjects they teach.” Their dedication means that “they are exceptionally concerned with bar passage” and always “available outside of the classroom.” “My experience at the Appalachian School of Law has been nothing short of exceptional,” confides one student. “The teachers love interacting with the students and are our greatest cheerleaders, mentors, and leaders.” Students tell us that “the greatest strength” of their law school is its “concern and respect for students as individuals.” “The administration, faculty, staff, and students have created a community where you can receive an excellent legal education in the midst of the natural beauty of the Appalachian Mountains,” explains one student.
Dominion Virginia Power Grant
January
17, 2013
Grundy,
VA -- The Appalachian School of Law and Professor Buzz Belleville were recently
awarded a $95,000 grant from Dominion Virginia Power to examine the barriers to
the development of onshore wind energy in Virginia. Despite the fact that (a)
Virginia has had a renewable energy goal for several years, and (b) there is
sufficient wind capacity in several locations along the Appalachian highlands
in Virginia, the state has no active commercial wind sites.
Prolonged
and contentious battles in Highland County and Roanoke County have resulted in
a couple approved Virginia sites (with fairly restrictive conditions), though
neither has yet come on line. Other proposed wind projects, such as one on East
River Mountain in Tazewell County, have been thwarted largely by local
opposition. Reported proposals in other Virginia counties face an uncertain
future, while other states along the Appalachian chain such as Pennsylvania and
West Virginia are growing their wind energy base.
The
grant from Dominion Virginia Power charges ASL’s Natural Resource Law Center
with cataloging and analyzing the legal, regulatory, policy and public opinion
opposition to onshore wind energy development in Virginia. The project will
explore the bases for local opposition, the local and state incentives and
disincentives for wind energy development, the barriers inherent in Virginia’s
permitting and siting process, and the differences between Virginia and
similarly situated states where wind energy development is proceeding.
Professor
Belleville is ASL’s specialist in energy law and policy, climate change law,
and renewable energy. He has presented on the “Appalachian Wind Wars” on
several occasions. He will engage ASL students to assist him in the project,
and he emphasizes that this project is not intended to be one advocating either
for or against wind energy development. Rather, he expects that the project
will result in a resource both for developers and local communities as they
consider future proposals for onshore wind energy development in Virginia.
ASL Upcoming events
January 28th Interviewing Skills Workshop 2:30 to
4 Trial Courtroom
February 4th Business Etiquette/Professional
Development Workshop 2:30 to 4 Trial Courtroom
February 11th Dos and Don’ts of Professional
Attire Fashion Show co-sponsored with AWIL Trial Courtroom 2:30 to 3:30 (start
time is tentative)
February 18th Speed Networking with ASL Alumni Booth
Center Classroom 2:30 to 4
February 25th 2L Career Planning Workshop 2:30 to 4
Trial Courtroom
March 18th 1L Career Planning Workshop 2:30 to 4 Trial
Courtroom
Either April 8th or April 15th TENTATIVE
Alumni LLM Speaker: Andrew Call, Class of 2007, has completed two LLM degrees
with honors
March 23rd (Saturday) the 5K Memorial Race in the
morning, alumni brunch (tentative), and the Practice Area Career Fair in the
afternoon (tentative depending on employer interest)
Singleton to Exhibit Art at the Booth Center Gallery
January 15, 2013
Singleton
to Exhibit Art at the Booth Center Gallery
Southwest Virginia Community
College would like to present “Expressions of the Soul” by Angela Singleton at
the Booth Center Gallery in Grundy, Virginia.
Angela’s stylistic, representational watercolors are inspired mostly by
nature and has been described as “visions of a new dimension and expressions of
the soul” by Interior designer and art collector Lois Endicott. Everyone is encouraged to view this exhibit
during Center hours from January 17 through February 27, 2013.
Angela Singleton is from the majestic
mountains of Southwest Virginia in Vansant, Virginia. She studied art throughout high school and
furthered her artistic education at Southwest Virginia Community College. Singleton has designed numerous logos for
special events such as the Festival of the Arts 2004 presented by SWCC and
logos for her former high school, Grundy Senior High. In 1993 Angela had three works chosen by
Miners and Merchants Bank for reproduction and publication.
Although Angela is constantly
working as a watercolor artist, she also works as an Assistant Department
Manager for a major retail food distributor in the southwestern Virginia
area. After extensive study of the cake
decorating craft, Angela’s goal of becoming a professional confections designer
became a reality. Applying her
expertise, she taught several cake decorating classes for SWCC.
For more information on this
exhibit please contact Rhonda Whited at 276-964-7228 or email Rhonda.whited@sw.edu For Center hours contact Eddie Hannah at
276-964-7558.
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