FAQs
Law supports externship opportunities in a wide range of judicial chambers, government offices, and non-profit and for-profit organizations. Please visit the Placements webpage for more information. If you do not see what you are interested in on our list of approved externships, you maypropose your own externship.
Second-year and third-year students (including "rising 2Ls" during their first summer) may participate in an externship during the Fall semester, the Spring semester, both semesters, or during the summer.
The process for securing an externship varies by placement.Students may register for a few externships on Novasis without obtaining any prior approval. Most externships are secured through job fairs, on-campus interviews, and postings on Symplicity, the electronic job posting system maintained by the Office of Career Strategy and Advancement.
Many, but not all, judicial externships are filled through a lottery matching process that takes place in February for summer judicial externships, in June for judicial externships in the following fall, and in October for judicial externships the following spring. Some judicial externship placements, however, require that you apply directly to the judge’s chambers. Please seemore information about judicial externships.
Once you have secured an externship, whether by applying directly to the externship placement or applying through Novasis, youmust submit theExternship and Practicum Enrollment Applicationfor approval to become academically enrolled.If approved, you should make any necessary adjustments to your course schedule after the Registrar adds the externship to your registration.
Experiential credit limits that are consistent with ABA accreditation have been set by the school. Please review these credit limits, as listed in the, carefully. If you have any questions, please contactMatthew McGovern, Director of Experiential Learning.
The earlier you begin planning the better. Many externships have prerequisites. Therefore, to make sure that you are eligible for the externship you want, it is best to review the externship offerings when you register for your second year classes. If your externship has prerequisites, you can be sure to take the pre-requisites as early as possible. If you have any questions, please make an appointment to speak withMatthew McGovern, Director of Experiential Learning.
To be eligible to receive academic credit, you must:
- work the required minimum hours of experiential learning on-site (3 credits, 135 hours; 4 credits, 180 hours; 6 credits, 270 hours; 6 credits over two semesters, 270 hours);
- keep an hours log and submit it at the end of your externship;
- complete and submit an Experiential Learning Objectives Worksheet;
- keep a reflection journal based upon what you are learning in your externship;
- externs in non-judicial placements participate in four common classroom sessions and meet with their faculty advisors at least four times during the semester
- externs in judicial placements attend a bi-weekly classroom sessions;
- for judicial externships, you must complete at least one significant written assignment, such as a bench memorandum or a draft opinion;
- complete an evaluation of your externship experience at the conclusion of the externship;
- submit a Field Supervisor's Final Reports as completed by your supervising attorney;
- any other assignment as given to you by your Advising Faculty Member.
There is a general University fee of $100 for each semester and summer.
It is the student's responsibility to ensure that the student is registered for the externship.
It is not uncommon for students to apply to more than one externship placement in a given semester or summer. Law asks that, should a student accept one externship, that he or she promptly notify any other externship placements of this decision. In the case of the judicial externship lottery, each student who is matched with a judge will be contacted to confirm their acceptance before the match is finalized. Once a student accepts an externship placement, the student is expected to follow through and will be permitted to withdraw only in extraordinary circumstances.
Because externship placements, faculty, and fellow students rely upon commitments made by students, once a student affirmatively accepts an externship, the student is committed to participate in that externship and may not withdraw except under extraordinary circumstances and with the approval of the Academic Dean or the Director of Experiential Learning. Additionally, once the student accepts an externship placement, the student commits that he, she or they will not transfer to another school, attend a different school as a visiting student, or study abroad during the summer or semester of the externship. Poor class scheduling is not an “extraordinary circumstance” justifying a withdrawal from an externship because students who accept an externship are expected to schedule their course load to accommodate the externship.
No. Law’s externship policy prohibits a student from participating in a clinic and an externship in the same semester.
Law generally does not prohibit holding a job while enrolled in an externship, provided that it does not pose an ethical or time management conflict. It is important that you notify your employer, Field Instructor and Advising Faculty Member so that they may check for potential conflicts of interest. Please note that you may not hold a legal work position while participating in a judicial externship. The externship must be your first priority when it comes to time-commitments. Therefore, you should carefully consider your workload before committing to a job and an externship at the same time.
No. Externships are graded pass, fail or pass with honors.
Students can earn between three (3) and twelve (12) academic credits at an externship placement. Please note that the criteria required to qualify for twelve (12) academic credits is high. If you wish to pursue twelve (12) academic credits at a placement, please discuss this issue withMatthew McGovern, Director of Experiential Learning.
Generally, students are limited to a single externship at each externship placement. In rare cases, Law may approve a second externship semester upon a showing that the experience in the second externship will involve significant additional development of the student's knowledge, experience, and skills beyond what the student achieved during the first semester.
Special rules apply to judicial externships. To receive academic credit for a second judicial externship, the second externship ordinarily must be with a court of a different level than the court of your first externship. For example, if you have completed an externship with a trial court judge, you may be eligible for a second externship with an appellate judge. In rare cases Law may approve a second externshipsemester in the same judicial chambers or court upon a showing that the experience in the second semester will involve significant additional development of the student's knowledge, experience, and skills beyond what the student achieved during the first semester.