Courses and Curriculum
The UConn School of Law offers a wide selection of courses across an array of legal disciplines, allowing students to follow their unique interests and prepare to practice in their chosen fields.
Current students are strongly encouraged to browse the course offerings through their Student Administration (PeopleSoft) account and/or the student portal rather than this through this listing.
First-Year JD Curriculum
Three-Year Day Division
Fall Term | Civil Procedure Contracts Legal Practice: Research & Writing Torts Criminal Law |
Winter Term | Legal Practice: Negotiation |
Spring Term | Constitutional Law Legal Practice: Interviewing, Counseling & Advocacy Property Statutory / Regulatory Elective |
Four-Year Evening Division
Fall Term | Civil Procedure I Legal Practice: Research & Writing Torts Contracts I |
Spring Term | Civil Procedure II Legal Practice: Interviewing, Counseling & Advocacy Contracts II Criminal Law |
June Term | Legal Practice: Negotiation |
Fall Term, Second Year | Property I Statutory / Regulatory Elective Constitutional Law I |
Spring Term, Second Year | Constitutional Law II Property II |
1L Legal Practice Program
The 1L Legal Practice Program is a year-long series of three courses that all students are required to take in their first year. The program is unique and among the most ambitious in the nation in that it provides intensive training in both “hard” and “soft” lawyering skills. Students are taught the traditional skills of legal research, analysis, objective writing, and oral and written advocacy. In addition, through simulation-based courses, they study and develop the core communicative and interpersonal skills of interviewing, counseling and negotiation. Together, these courses provide a critical foundation for the wide range of clinics and experiential learning opportunities available to students in their second and third years, and ultimately for the practice of law. The program consists of the following courses:
Legal Practice: Research and Writing - Fall Semester
During the fall semester, students focus on legal research and two essential types of legal writing: predictive (drafting office and research memoranda) and persuasive (drafting briefs and motions). Students are also taught how to conduct legal research effectively and efficiently using electronic and print resources. The course is taught in small classes, affording students the opportunity to learn in an intimate environment. Students have multiple opportunities to meet with Legal Practice faculty for individual conferences and to receive detailed, individualized feedback on their writing.
Legal Practice: Interviewing, Counseling and Advocacy - Spring Semester
During the spring semester, the focus shifts to developing and honing students’ interviewing, counseling and advocacy skills. Students also continue to develop their writing skills, concluding the semester with an intensive project that requires them to write a brief and make oral arguments. A popular feature of the spring semester is that in each section of the course, these interpersonal and advocacy skills are taught through intensive simulations and mock arguments with supervision and feedback provided by practicing lawyers who are adjunct faculty members at the Law School. Once students learn these lawyering skills, they are well-prepared for the upper-class clinical and experiential learning opportunities available to them at the Law School.
Legal Practice: Negotiation - Interterm
The negotiation interterm is an intensive course in negotiation theory and practice that Day Division students take in January and Evening Division students take in June. Students learn how to analyze and plan for negotiations, advocate effectively and ethically at the bargaining table, and draft contracts to memorialize negotiated agreements. Students are taught through a combination of in-class discussions and exercises, and out-of-class simulated negotiations that are observed and critiqued by practicing lawyers who are adjunct faculty members. The opportunity to interact with, and receive feedback from, practicing lawyers is a unique and valuable feature of the course.
Upper Division JD Curriculum
After completing the first-year curriculum, JD students in subsequent years must meet three additional requirements:
- Complete the Legal Profession course, which focuses on devoted to the issues of professional responsibility and legal ethics.
- Satisfy the writing requirement by completing a scholarly paper under faculty supervision, usually in connection with a seminar course, an independent research project or an article for a UConn Law legal journal.
- Satisfy the practice-based legal requirement through a clinic, field placement or practicum course.
With few requirements after the first year of study, UConn Law students have the flexibility to tailor their course choices to their interests.
Degree Requirements
To earn a JD degree at the UConn School of Law, students must earn a minimum number of credits, achieve or exceed a minimum grade point average, complete a set of required courses, fulfill an upper level writing requirement, and complete a practice-based learning requirement.
Learning Outcomes
In keeping with American Bar Association standards, successful completion of the JD Program at the University of Connecticut School of Law provides graduates with competence in "the knowledge and understanding of substantive and procedural law; legal analysis and reasoning, legal research, problem-solving, and written and oral communication in the legal context; exercise of proper professional and ethical responsibilities to clients and the legal system; and other professional skills needed for competent and ethical participation as a member of the legal profession."