Public Interest Internship Program (B547)
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Session:
Thursday, April 17, Noon, Room 121
There was a mandatory class session Thursday, April 17, noon, in room 121 for students enrolled in B547 for summer 2008.
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The academic component is a critical part of summer internship; it is designed to encourage you to think reflectively and critically about the practice of law and the ethical issues it poses. This class session will cover the course requirements as well as provide essential information on some ethical issues you will face.
Description
The Public Interest Internship Program encourages students to gain experience in public interest work by permitting students to obtain academic credit for unpaid legal work done in public service venues. Students are supervised by a faculty member at the law school as well as an attorney or judge at the internship site. A critical component of the internship is the academic component assigned by the faculty member. This academic component is designed to encourage students to think reflectively and critically about the practice of law and the ethical issues it poses.
First thing's first:
- Complete the permission form and read the Student Handbook.
- At registration you will be assigned a faculty supervisor; contact him or her before you start your internship.
- You must register for B547 before starting work. No credit will be given unless registration pre-dates the beginning of work.
- Complete all academic requirements on time including staying in contact with your faculty supervisor.
Course Requirements
- You are required to read the Rules of Professional Responsibility for your jurisdiction. In Indiana, those rules may be found in Indiana Rules of Court (West 2006) or online.
- You must attend a mandatory class Thursday, April 17th at noon in room 121. If you cannot attend, there is a scheduled makeup on Friday, May 9th at noon in room 124.
- You must be accessible on a continuous basis via your law school e-mail account.
- You must contact your faculty supervisor by e-mail within the first week of starting your internship using the initial status report form. This report will include (1) your supervising attorney's or judge's name, address, telephone number and e-mail address; (2) verification of your starting and ending date; and (3) confirmation of having read the Rules of Professional Responsibility for your jurisdiction.
- You must keep track of the hours you work at the internship. You will report the hours with each essay (see #6 below).
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You must submit to your faculty supervisor reflective essays about your internship
using the essay form.
- Weekly. Write reflective essays on a weekly basis.
- Deadline for submission. Submit your essays by e-mail to your faculty supervisor using the required essay form every second and fourth Sunday of each month that you are working. This means you will submit two or three essays on each of the following Sundays if you worked any part of the preceding two- or three-week period:
- May 11
- May 25
- June 8
- June 22
- July 13
- July 27
- August 10
- August 24
Essays are due on Sunday before 9:00 p.m. EDT. You must obtain advance approval from your faculty supervisor if you believe that you need to deviate from this schedule.
- Reflect. Your essays should be reflective in nature, not merely descriptive. Read the excerpt about reflective lawyering on the B547 website.
- Length. Your essays should be three to five pages of double-spaced text for each week of work. Be sure to number the pages of your essay.
Due Dates/Deadlines
- Prior to the start of your internship, you must attend a mandatory class.
- Within the first week of starting your internship, you must submit a status report with contact information and a work plan (see #4 above).
- Each week throughout your internship, you must write a reflective essay.
- Each month, on the second and fourth Sundays, following weeks that you have worked, you must submit your reflective essays by e-mail to your faculty supervisor before 9:00 p.m. EDT.
Grading
The Public Interest Internship Program is a pass/fail course. Your grade will be based on your fulfillment of the requirements set forth above. Failure to comply with the above requirements in a timely and professional manner could result in:
- Failing the course;
- Loss of course credit;
- Involuntary withdrawal from the course (which may require repayment of financial aid); and/or;
- Placement of a negative letter concerning your lack of professional responsibility in your law school file.
No academic credit will be given for work of which your faculty supervisor is unaware.