Clinical
Professor of Law and Director of Externships.
Professor Katz earned her B.A. at the
University of Michigan in 1969 and her J.D. at Yale Law School
in 1972.
Before coming to the law school in 1993, Professor Katz taught in the clinical
programs of the University of Pennsylvania Law School from 1986 to 1993. Her recent publications are "Counseling
Externship Students" (Clinical Law Review), "Evaluating the Skills Curriculum: Challenges and Opportunities for Law
Schools" (Mercer Law Review), "Reconsidering
Collaboration and Modeling: Enriching
Clinical Legal Pedagogy" (Gonzaga Law Review),
"Confronting Students: Evaluation in the Process of Mentoring Student
Professional Development" (Clinical Law Review),
"Personal Journals in Law School Externship Programs: Improving
Pedagogy" (Thomas M. Cooley Journal
of Practical and Clinical Law), and "Using Faculty Tutorials to Foster
Externship Students' Critical Reflection" (Clinical Law
Review).
Before teaching, Professor Katz practiced law with the Bucks County Legal Aid
Society, Women's Law Project, Public Interest Law Center of Philadelphia,
and Public Interest Advocacy division of the New Jersey Public Advocate.
While at the Women's Law Project, she was coauthor of Women's
Rights and the Law and The Impact of the ERA on State Laws.
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