Texas Law Youth Court

Students will train and supervise local middle school students who conduct peer-run hearings, and participate as mentors to students. Youth Court is an alternative discipline program designed to challenge the school-to-prison pipeline, a national trend whereby children are pushed out of school and into the juvenile justice system. Youth court helps students avoid detrimental punishments of suspensions, expulsions, and criminal citations by agreeing to complete appropriate consequences suggested by their peers and tailored to particular offenses. Law students will teach middle school students to advocate for their peer, choose appropriate consequences tailored to particular behaviors, and promote student citizenship in the school community.

Organization

UT Law Pro Bono Program Educational Equity Project

The Expunction Project is an internal project of the Richard and Ginni Mithoff Pro Bono Program’s Educational Equity Project.

Project Details

Project Start Date

September 2015

Approximate hours of work requested
1 hour per week through November 20, 2015
Training
A 2 hour training will be held Tuesday, September 15, 5pm-7pm in TNH 3.124; a make-up training will be held Thursday, September 17, 5pm-7pm in the Goodwin Conference Room (CCJ 1.312).
Skills used
Client communication and problem-solving; mediation; restorative justice practices
Project location
Webb Middle School, 601 St. John’s Avenue
Address
727 E. Dean Keeton Street, Austin, TX 78705
Number of student volunteers requested
30
Class year preference
1L, 2L, 3L, LLM
Required skills
Experience working with kids a plus but not required
To Apply
Submit email stating interest to leah.glowacki90@gmail.com or simply attend our training