Monday, December 8, 2014

Because Columbia Law students are such fragile flowers . . .

 . . . they can apply to have this semester's finals postponed if the Ferguson and Staten Island situations have unduly traumatized them:

In his email to the Columbia Law School community, interim dean Robert Scott said “students who feel that their performance on examinations will be sufficiently impaired due to the effects of these recent events may petition Dean Alice Rigas to have an examination rescheduled.” It was obvious that the “petition” is a formality. In grand jury parlance, dean Rigas would approve a ham sandwich.
But just to be sure, and to avoid taxing the minds of traumatized students, the law school has sent out the following email:
We are writing with information about how to go about postponing your exams, in the event that you choose to do so, due to trauma in the wake of recent national events. Exam postponement will be granted on an individual, “opt-out” basis. In order to postpone your exam(s), please email Dean Alice Rigas (arigas@law.columbia.edu) in the Registrar’s Office. The email need not be extensive and each person’s language may be the same. We are providing sample language for your email request below.
Subject: Emergency Action: Request for Exam Extension
Dear Dean Rigas,
In light of recent traumatic events, I would like to request a(n) exam extension for the following exam(s).
Even in a one paragraph email, the administration can’t resist this bit of legalize: “Exam postponement will be granted on an individual, ‘opt-out’ basis.” Is the law school trying to preserve the illusion that dean Rigas will provide individualized analysis of petitions for postponement?
Apparently so. According to The Wall Street Journal, law school curriculum dean Avery Katz says an extension request must include an “individual explanation” for why it’s necessary. And spokesperson Nancy Goldfarb says the school reviews and evaluates “each request individually” and makes decisions “based on a student’s specific situation.” 

And so far, every stinkin' request has been granted.  These are going to be the big-shot legal minds in our country in the next couple of decades.

2 comments:

  1. Smart students and good lawyers know the value of delay. Continuances are every lawyer's friend, to be taken when they can be gotten, i.e., Motion Approved.

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  2. The point here is that the administration of one of the nation's most prestigious law schools is perpetuating not only a coddling mentality, but a the false notion that there was something racial about the Brown and Garner incidents.

    ReplyDelete