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Founded in 1999 at American University
Washington College of Law with the support of
Mrs. Thurgood Marshall and the late Mrs.
William Brennan,
the
Marshall-Brennan Constitutional Literacy Project
was designed to mobilize talented second-year
and third-year law students to teach
a course on the United States Constitution in
the public schools of the District of Columbia
and Maryland. The vision for the program is to
empower high school students to be responsible
citizens and lifelong participants in the
democratic process by teaching them
constitutional rights and responsibilities
through Supreme Court cases that affect students
directly.
The Marshall-Brennan Constitutional Literacy
Project counteracts the well-known effects of
“civic illiteracy” among America’s youth by
providing high school students with a rigorous
and sustained education about the United States
Constitution and how it affects them and their
families. Southern University Law Center started
its Chapter of the Marshall-Brennan
Constitutional Literacy Project in
January 2009. The Law Center hosted a regional
moot court competition on February 21 and 22,
2009 with 23 high school students from its
partner high schools participating. Eight
students were selected from the regional
competition to represent the SULC
Marshall-Brennan Project in the National
Marshall-Brennan Moot
Court Competition on March 22 and 23, 2009 in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
In addition to facilitating instructions on the
United States Constitution, Marshall-Brennan
teaching fellows serve as mentors to high school
students, provide students guidance about
college careers and advice to those students who
are considering the legal profession. The
Marshall-Brennan fellows will reap the reward of
giving back to the community in which they are
attending law school and where many will
practice law. Through teaching constitutional
law concepts, the fellows are actually given an
additional opportunity to prepare for an
important part of the bar and to improve their
reasoning skills. |