Eighty-four academic credits are required for graduation.
Academic credits are awarded in compliance with the regulations
of the School of Law–Camden. Completion of the program generally
requires three years of full-time study or four years of part-time
study. The courses required for graduation include the prescribed
first-year program; Professional Responsibility; and a one-year course in Legal Analysis, Writing, and Research (LAWR) taught by full-time writing faculty.
Students must also
earn 3 writing credits, one of which must be intensive writing, and 1 skills credit. The purpose of the writing credit program is to ensure
that students have substantial and rigorous legal writing experiences
supervised by the faculty after their first year in law school. The work
done for writing credit varies from research or seminar papers to shorter forms
of analysis and can include writing more typical of legal practice. The skills
requirement ensures that students have exposure to lawyering skills.
Courses that qualify range from Interviewing and Counseling to Trial Advocacy.
Matriculated students in good standing who successfully complete the
course of study are awarded the degree of juris doctor. Exceptional
students may be awarded the degree cum laude, magna cum laude, or summa cum laude.