The State Bar Association of North Dakota Spring 2014 Gavel Magazine | Page 8

UND LAW STUDENTS EXCEL IN SKILLS COMPETITIONS K AT H R Y N R . L . R A N D Dean, University of North Dakota School of Law The UND School of Law’s Curricular Mission describes our educational program as “designed to produce competent and ethical lawyers with entrylevel proficiency and professional selfsufficiency.” In other words, we want our graduates to be ready for practice. As part of our practice-readiness efforts, we’ve increased student opportunities to participate in skills competitions. In addition to our traditional moot court competition in the fall, which culminates in a final round judged by the North Dakota Supreme Court, our students participate in multiple moot court and trial competitions in the spring. Beyond honing advocacy skills, these competitions give students a taste of the pitfalls in real-world practice—ethical dilemmas, legal gray areas, problematic facts, questions that are not clearly answered in the record, oversights in preparation, mistakes in the courtroom, left-field questions from the court, and the impact of nerves and emotion on an 8 THE GAVEL advocate’s presentation of a case. Student competitions are generously supported by private donations—these are investments in the future of our profession. This financial support allows us to fund student travel to regional and national competitions, to engage practicing attorneys as adjunct coaches, to present awards to outstanding students, and to coordinate the multi-day Carrigan Cup trial competition. Many more attorneys and judges give of their time and talent, sitting as judges in practice and competition round ̰