Legal Writing Program
Overview
Our dedicated staff of experienced professors is committed to making every student a better writer. We have developed a rigorous, three-semester program that engages students with real-world assignments.
These assignments – and the detailed feedback from the professors – are designed to make students “practice ready” for their summer internships or post-JD positions. Through this effort, VLGS students have a regional and national reputation for excellence in legal writing. We encourage you to explore these pages to learn how our program can help you master the art of legal writing.
Resources
Student Writing Competition Portal
Professor Accomplishments
Professor Greg Johnson had a recent publication in The Vermont Bar Journal: Fall 2017, Volume 43, No. 3. His piece is titled “Is Neil Gorsuch a Role Model for Legal Writing? Yes and No”.
This past summer, Professor Brian Porto was busy publishing a book which is titled May It Please the Court, Third Edition. You can purchase the book here. He also had an article featured in The Vermont Bar Journal: Summer 2017 Volume 43. His article is titled The Rhetorical Legacy of Antonin Scalia.
Student Accomplishments
VLGS Student Is Nominated For The Burton Award
We are delighted to announce that we have chosen Chester Harper to be Vermont Law and Graduate School’s official nominee for the Burton Award for Distinguished Legal Writing. We chose Chester Harper’s article, Citizen or Soldier? An Originalist Response to District of Columbia v. Heller and the Intellectual Origins of the Second Amendment. We have high hopes that Chester’s article can carry on this great tradition.
Chester has spent most of his life living in northern New England. Currently, he is a student at Vermont Law and Graduate School focusing on Constitutional Law and Legal Writing. Before deciding to study law, Chester studied intellectual history at Marlboro College where his area of focus was Early-Modern European military theory. He also spent a number of years working at a museum of the Upper-Connecticut River Valley’s history in the Colonial period. Chester is excited to bring an interdisciplinary approach to constitutional analysis by combining academic history with legal analysis. Chester and his wife, Theresa, look forward to permanently settling in central Vermont after graduation.
Vermont Law and Graduate School students consistently win the award. VLGS students have now won the award five times in the last eight years (Benjamin Leoni (2011); Garrett Chrostek (2012); Lizzie Tisher (2014); Carrie Scrufari (2017); Andrew Rome (2018)). This is a high honor and a tremendous recognition of how accomplished our students are.
Jaclyn Belczyk, executive editor at jurist.org, presents this info session on JURIST; the history, what it is, and how you can participate. View the video here
Faculty
Zachary Broughton
Jared Carter
- Professor of Law
- Co-director, Appellate Project
- First Amendment Law
Anna F. Connolly
- Assistant Professor of Law
Catherine Fregosi
- Assistant Professor of Law
Greg Johnson
- Director, Legal Writing Program
- Professor of Law
Michael Kovac
Brian Porto
- Professor of Law Emeritus
Grant Smith
- Assistant Professor of Law
Legal Writing News and Events
No News & Updates