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Law 11

Page history last edited by abogado 14 years, 3 months ago

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LAW 11 - LEGAL ASSISTING 11 - CIVIL LITIGATION COURSE SYLLABUS

              

Student Responsibility: Our online law program requires a comprehensive and complete understanding of a number of details, procedures and information. Students are assumed to have carefully read all of our procedures and policies located at our "Welcome Message" at http://welcome.pbwiki.com - which is a comprehesive collection of materials for our program. Students are held fully responsible for information contained at this central location. Students must login to their online class and post their introduction and first set of assignments within a week from the start of the semester or session or they may be excluded and dropped from class, and not permitted to enter the moodle classroom.

 


Course Assignments:  The assignments for each class and the due dates are located at duedates for each class. If there is a "conflict" between the due dates and the moodle class assignments, quizzes, forums, text and materials, the  moodle materials will "over rule" if there are differences with the duedates.


YOUR INSTRUCTOR

see information on your instructor including website, phone no. etc. http://lamission.edu/law/lawfaculty.htm

 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Catalog: CSU 3 units. Law 11 is a continuation of Law 10 with a comprehensive study of the composition, location, and jurisdiction of all courts, a study of the production and admistration within the judicial structure, a detailed examination of legal research of case law, statutes, and administrative regulations, and an introduction to legal drafting and writing.

Law 11 introduces the student to the Litigation Process starting with the preparation and filing of suits, the court rules on preparing papers and document, the answer, and various defendants' pleadings such as demurrer, and motion to strike, discovery, interrogatories, depositions, request for production of documents, and preparation of pre-trial and trial paperwork and documents.

The student will learn how to draft, and craft pleadings, including complaints, and answers, and will study how to prepare discovery, such as interrogatories, Notices of Depositions, deposition summaries, and will learn the rules of the Code of Civil Procedure as they apply to discovery and pleadings. The paralegal student will als be introduced to pre-trial and trial documents including trial briefs, jury instructions, and Motions In Limine.

 

COURSE TEXT

FUNDAMENTALS OF CALIFORNIA CIVIL LITIGATION FOR PARALEGALS  by Marlene A. Maerowitz and Thomas A. Mauet, Aspen Law & Business. see most recent edition at - http://lamission.edu/law/textbooks 


STUDENT LEARNING OUTCO0MES

By the end of the class, students will be able to:

1. demonstrate their knowledge in the substantive law and procedures of civil litigation including Litigation Overview, Informal Fact Gathering and Investigation, Case Evaluation & Strategy, Parties and Jurisdiction, Pleadings, Law and Motions, Motions Practice, Provisional Remedies, Discovery, Settlements, Trial Preparation, Enforcement of Judgments, preparation of complaints and interrogatories

 

2. "think critically" in law, and in the area of civil litigation

 

3. brief a law case in civil litigation

 

4.  prepare certain legal documents, forms or papers in the area of of civil litigation 

 

GRADING & EVALUATION

The class will be composed of quizzes, postings to an "electronic bulletin board" - threaded discussions, and written projects.The student should work off of the duedates for the class. The deadlines are clearly posted on the schedule. Quizzes will be posted and students are expected to fill in their answers to the multiple choice questions during a deadline period. After the time period has expired, the quiz link will no longer be available, and the student will NOT be allowed to take the quiz (certain exceptions might be made if the student emails his/her online instructor regarding exceptional family circumstances or situtations - not just "not enough time", or "late", and the instructor will decide and determine each request on the facts of the circumstances).

 

The "letter grade" scale is as follows.

A =  90-100 percent of total points

B =  80-89

C =  70-79

D =  60-69

F =  Below 60


Distribution of Grades

Tests 40% of your grade

Assignments 50 % of your grade

Forum Discussions - Class Participation - points posted at the end of class 10% of your grade


Office Hours: see Faculty page at http://lamission.edu/law/lawfaculty.htm - Office Hours, Mon. - Friday 9-5 pm at the Office Telephone number of each Faculty member, or upon special appointment - email the faculty member for your appointment date and time.

 

Course Structure: This course will be offered online and hybrid in the classroom, and the student should check the online portal at Mission College - http://lamission.edu/online for the class and the course management system.

 

LATE ASSIGNMENTS: ASSIGNMENTS SUBMITTED LATE WILL NOT BE ACCEPTED UNLESS PRIOR APPROVAL IS REQUESTED AND GRANTED BY THE INSTRUCTOR.

 

EXTRA CREDIT: Since the law is in constant change, along with the advent of the Internet, issues may arise that are timely and germane to our class. Therefore, opportunities may arise during the term that allow for extra credit, although no extra credit is presently offered.

 

INCOMPLETE: If you require a grade of "incomplete," you must advise me as soon as possible and discuss the terms of its removal.

 

ACADEMIC HONESTY: Academic honesty is highly valued at Mission College, just as it is at all colleges and universities. A student must always submit work that represents his or her original words or ideas. If any words or ideas are used that do not represent the student's original words or ideas, the student must cite all relevant sources. The student should also make it clear to what extent such sources were used. Words or ideas that require citations include, but are not limited to, all hard copy or electronic publications, whether copyrighted or not, and all verbal or visual communications when the content of such communications clearly originates from an identifiable source. All submissions to any public meeting or private mailbox fall within the scope of words and ideas that require citations if used by someone other than the original author.

 

Course Assignments: see assignments under due dates at http://duedates.pbwiki.com .

 

Course Evaluation:

The final grade will be determined by: averaging quizzes, discussion questions and written assignments, each assigned 100 or more points.

 

* This syllabus is subject to change. Please note revision dates ("updated") below. Students are responsible for the most recent updated version of this syllabus.

 

Reasonable Accommodations:  If you are a student with a disability and require online class accommodations, please see Prof. Jordan an email to discuss arrangements.  The sooner we are aware that you are eligible for accommodations, the quicker we will be able to provide them.  If you have not done so already, you may also wish to contact the DSP&S Office in Instructional Building 1018 (phone 818/364-7732 TTD 818/364-7861). There website and resources are located at http://www.lamission.edu/dsps/

 

For students requiring accommodations, the DSP&S Office at Mission College provides special assistance in areas like: registering for courses, specialized tutoring, note-taking, mobility assistance, special instruction, testing assistance, special equipment, special materials, instructor communications, community referrals and job placement.

 

Updated:  11-12-09

 

 

 

 

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