CCLI

Internal Materials

Outreach Materials

Evaluations

Potential Collaborations Street Law –

  • http://www.streetlaw.org/en/Page/858/Directory_of_Registered_Law_SchoolBased_Street_Law_Programs
  • Marshall Brennan – http://www.wcl.american.edu/marshallbrennan/partners.cfm
  • Boalt, Juvenile Hall Outreach (JHO),  slpscoordinator@gmail.com http://www.law.berkeley.edu/10640.htm Juvenile Hall Outreach is a Street Law program that empowers incarcerated and detained youth by teaching them their legal rights and basic criminal procedure. Berkeley Law students teach a 6-week course at the Alameda County Juvenile Hall which covers Miranda rights, search and seizure, three strikes, and police misconduct. Teaching teams comprised of four to six Berkeley Law students are assigned to teach in particular juvenile hall units which vary by age, gender, and level of security. Law students design a detailed teaching curriculum, and are expected to meet weekly with their teaching team for lesson planning, collaboration and preparation. Participating students learn about criminal procedure—including the disparity between theory and reality in high crime neighborhoods—and gain experience working with incarcerated clients.
  • (Nancy says don’t reach out, long story) USF/GGU Street Law Program http://www.usfca.edu/law/faculty/thomas_nazario/ Tel. – (415) 422-6832 Fax – (415) 422-6433 nazario@usfca.edu GGU course catalog LAW 886 STREET LAW The Street Law Project operates in conjunction with approximately 25 Bay Area high schools and several middle schools and their respective school districts. Law students, working under faculty supervision, serve as student instructors and teach a course entitled “Street Law” which annually reaches 2,000 predominately inner-city school students. The program seeks to promote legal literacy among young people to ensure that they possess that minimum amount of practical, legal knowledge needed to understand the system as a whole and how it can work in their behalf. Law student instructors deliver units in Housing, Consumer, Family, Criminal, and Constitutional Law at their assigned school sites. They also participate in weekly seminars and research and develop additional material on California law to be used in their classes. Prerequisite: completion of first-year courses. Street Law is taught by the University of San Francisco School of Law, with classes meeting at their campus. This course counts toward completion of the Experiential Learning Requirement. This course is graded on a Credit/No Credit basis. Students must have approval from the associate dean for student services to enroll in this course. Units: 3 , Offered: Fall 2013 , Spring 2013
  • USF Course Catalog Street Law – 3 Units The Street Law Project operates in conjunction with approximately 25 Bay Area high schools and several middle schools and their respective school districts. Law students, working under faculty supervision, serve as student instructors and teach a course entitled “Street Law” which annually reaches 2,000 predominately inner-city school students. The program seeks to promote legal literacy among young people to ensure that they possess that minimum amount of practical, legal knowledge needed to understand the system as a whole and how it can work in their behalf. Law student instructors deliver units in Housing, Consumer, Family, Criminal, and Constitutional Law at their assigned school sites. They also participate in weekly seminars and research and develop additional material on California law to be used in their classes.”
  • Santa Clara http://law.scu.edu/academics/courses/teaching-practical-legal-skills-(street-law)-470.cfm
  • Stanford http://streetlaw.stanford.edu/