Columbus School of Law
The Columbus School of Law, also known as CUA Law, is the law school of The Catholic University of America, in Washington, D.C.
More than 450 Juris Doctor students attend CUA Law. Incoming classes are typically composed of about 150 students, including day and evening programs. Around 1,900 students apply annually.
According to CUA Law's 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 49% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, employment requiring bar passage nine months after graduation.
History
began offering instruction in law in 1895 as part of its decision to open "faculties for the laity." The department was turned into an official school in 1898.Catholic University's law school has established a progressive history of inclusion. Its first African-American student was enrolled in 1902; its first female student in 1922.
In 1919, the Knights of Columbus founded an educational program known as Columbus University which provided an evening education program for Catholic war veterans returning from World War I. This institution was closely affiliated with Catholic University and shared faculty at both institutions' Washington, D.C. locations.
In 1954 Columbus University merged with Catholic University's law school to form the Columbus School of Law. The law school has been accredited by the Association of American Law Schools since 1921 and the American Bar Association since 1925.
Academics
Curriculum
Catholic University's J.D. program can be completed over three years of full-time day study or four years of part-time evening study.The first-year curriculum is prescribed for all students. The day-division curriculum consists of seven required courses totaling 29 credit hours. Evening-division students are required to complete the same basic courses within the first two years of their law school career. Revised for 2013, the new curriculum is designed to strengthen first-year doctrinal courses, to support the development of practice-area concentrations, and to emphasize training that will help graduates transition to the real world of practice.
The upper-division curriculum comprises several requirements, courses that are strongly recommended, and elective options. CUA Law students must complete a minimum of 84 credits to earn the J.D. degree. Required upper division courses include Constitutional Law II, Professional Responsibility, Professional Skills, and Upper-Level Writing. The law school is developing a Transition-to-Practice requirement for students. This new requirement is expected to be fulfilled by taking either a clinical course, or a capstone course. Foundational courses for all areas of legal practice—and thus strongly recommended for all Upper Division students— include Evidence, Corporations, and Criminal Procedure.
To respond to increasing demand for specialized legal services, the Law School has developed practice-area concentrations for upper division students in Civil Litigation, Criminal Litigation, Family Law, Intellectual Property, Labor and Employment Law and Securities Regulation.
Degrees offered
In addition to the J.D. program, the school offers LL.M. programs in Law & Technology, Securities Law, and Comparative and International Law.The school also offers an LL.M. program in American law with the Faculty of Law and Administration of the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, Poland. It allows Jagiellonian law students and students enrolled in the CUA-JU LL.M. program to study the essential substantive and procedural elements of the legal system of the United States.
The school offers a M.L.S. degree program, which enhances the ability of professionals to work with lawyers and legal issues, to gain a deeper knowledge of a particular legal field, and to understand laws and regulations. Students can choose to concentrate in the fields of Compliance and Corporate Responsibility, Employment and Human Resources, or Intellectual Property. Alternatively, students may choose a General U.S. Law option, which provides a broad overview of the law and legal practice.
Faculty
CUA Law had 42 full-time faculty members as of 2013. The school's student-faculty ratio was 10.27 to 1.Institutes and programs
CUA Law offers five opportunities for specialized legal study; four of them are certificate-granting. The programs are designed to give students the opportunity to pursue a specified concentration of courses. Each institute accepts approximately 15 students each academic year. They are:- Law and Technology Institute
- Comparative and International Law Institute
- Law and Public Policy Program
- Securities and Corporate Law Program
- Interdisciplinary Program in Law and Religion
Experiential learning
The Columbus School of Law has an extensive legal externship program through which about 200 upperclass students per year earn course credits during the fall, spring, and summer by working in nonprofit organizations; federal, state, and local government agencies; Congress; and for judges, law firms, trade associations and corporations in the D.C. area.
Publications
The Columbus School of Law has two student-edited law journals:- Catholic University Law Review
- Catholic University Journal of Law and Technology
Student life
CUA Law had the third largest drop in enrollment between the 2010-2011 academic year and the 2013-2014 academic year with enrollment falling 39.5%.
There are more than 30 active student organizations on campus.
The school has a moot court program, with teams practicing in international law, communications law, labor law, constitutional law, securities law, national security, and a trials competition. The moot court team holds an annual inter-school competition between 1Ls called SoapBox.
Campus
Completed in 1994, the law building contains the Kathryn J. DuFour Law Library, the Walter A. Slowinski and Haislip and Yewell Courtrooms, and the three-story Keelty Atrium. It features a cafeteria, student lockers, an underground attached parking garage, and an ATM. The Columbus School of Law is located on the campus of the Catholic University of America and law students have access to many of the same services and facilities as undergraduate students.The school is a five-minute walk from the Brookland-CUA metro station.
Admissions
CUA Law had a 55.4% acceptance rate in 2013 with the school receiving 1,869 applications. The school's matriculation rate was 15.6%, with 161 of the 1,035 admits enrolling.The median LSAT and GPA was 154 and 3.21 for students entering in Fall 2013.
Employment outcomes
According to CUA Law's official 2013 ABA-required disclosures, 49% of the Class of 2013 obtained full-time, long-term, employment requiring bar passage nine months after graduation. None of those jobs were school-funded positions.CUA Law ranked 150th out of the 201 ABA-approved law schools in terms of the percentage of 2013 graduates with non-school-funded, full-time, long-term, bar passage required jobs nine months after graduation.
CUA Law's Law School Transparency under-employment score is 26.1%, indicating the percentage of the Class of 2013 unemployed, pursuing an additional degree, or working in a non-professional, short-term, or part-time job nine months after graduation.
The majority of CUA Law 2013 graduates were employed in Washington, D.C., Maryland or Virginia nine months after graduation.
Costs and student debt
The total cost of attendance at CUA Law for the 2013-2014 academic year is $70,212. The average annual increase in tuition and fees at CUA Law for the past five years has been 4.02%.The Law School Transparency estimated debt-financed cost of attendance for three years is $269,220. According to U.S. News & World Report, the average indebtedness of 2013 graduates who incurred law school debt was $144,801, and 86% of 2013 graduates took on debt.
Rankings
In the 2021 "Best Graduate Schools" edition of U.S. News & World Report, the Columbus School of Law was ranked 111th.Notable alumni
Congress
- Bob Casey Jr., U.S. Senator for Pennsylvania, 1988
- Tom Harkin, U.S. Senator for Iowa, 1972
- Kathy Hochul, U.S. Representative for New York, 1983
Federal government
- Kathleen Q. Abernathy, former Federal Communications Commission Commissioner
- Naomi C. Earp, U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission member
- John H. Fanning, former National Labor Relations Board Chair
- Daniel M. Gallagher, Commissioner of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
- Brendan Carr, Commissioner of the Federal Communications Commission
- David Redl, Assistant Secretary for Communications and Information at the United States Department of Commerce
Federal judiciary
- Edward J. Damich, Chief Judge of the United States Court of Federal Claims
- Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia and the presiding judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court
- Joseph F. Leeson, Jr., Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
- Christine Luchok Fallon, Reporter of Decisions for the U.S. Supreme Court
State government
- Martin Connor, New York State Senator
- Susan Longley, State Senator from Maine
- Peggy A. Quince, Justice of the Florida Supreme Court
- Robert A. Watson, Rhode Island House Minority Leader
- Stephen McNichols, governor of Colorado
- William J. Shea, Connecticut Supreme Court justice
Business
- Michael Bidwill, Arizona Cardinals President
Non-profit
- Alexandra Dunn, Executive Director and General Counsel of the Environmental Counsel of States