Law school tuition rising for University of North Dakota students

 
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Feb 12, 2008 - 04:05:31 CST
The University of North Dakota's law school wants to begin a series of steep tuition increases this fall, which includes four consecutive years' worth of 15 percent annual rises for newly enrolled students.

The Board of Higher Education's budget, audit and finance committee endorsed the changes Monday. They still must be reviewed by the full board, and by the Legislature's Budget Section, an interim committee.

UND's law school tuition is relatively cheap when matched against comparable universities in other states, according to a memo outlining the proposed increases. They are intended to raise tuition collections from $1.6 million to $3.04 million in the 2011-12 academic year.

The higher rates will provide money for faculty pay increases, a new law school faculty position, funds for student teaching and research assistants, and support for the school's law review, legal research service and moot court, which allows law students to practice courtroom skills.

The board's three-member budget committee includes two lawyers, Richie Smith of Wahpeton and Jon Backes of Minot. The third member is John Q. Paulsen of Fargo, who is the president of the full board.

"It's a tremendous increase. I can assure you that the salaries of starting-out North Dakota lawyers are not increasing, at least in North Dakota, at nearly that rate," Backes said.

However, Backes added, "I do understand the need of the law school to provide sufficient funding to fund its faculty expenses and its programs."

Beginning this fall, law students would pay a per-hour tuition charge for each class they take, with no upper limit. UND's law school now has about 250 students.

Resident students now pay $6,069 in tuition for a year's instruction, according to the law school memo outlining the changes.

Current students would see their tuition costs rise by 7.3 percent, to $6,510, during the 2008-09 school year. It would be followed by a 10.1 percent increase the following year, to $7,170. The figures assume 15 hours of class work for each of two semesters.

Current students from the three states and two Canadian provinces bordering North Dakota would pay 150 percent of the resident rate, while students from other locations would pay double the resident rate, the memo says.

For new students, the tuition increases would be steeper. A law student enrolling this fall would pay $6,979 for the 2008-09 school year, an increase of 15 percent from current rates.

Under the plan, the beginning rate for new students would increase another 15 percent for each of the next three years. In 2011-12, new students would pay $10,620 a year in tuition.

The law school's dean, Paul LeBel, consulted with law students about the proposed increases. The original plan was to implement them over three years, but the schedule was stretched to four years, the memo describing the changes says.

"Although students would prefer not to have tuition increases, they were generally supportive of the plan and the resulting benefits," it said.
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Law school tuition rising for University of North Dakota students
Comments

SNAP! wrote on Feb 13, 2008 1:20 AM:

" It's about time that ALL the schools in the NDUS raised student tuition to increase faculty compensation. We are expected to give our lives for the students and live poorly so they can have low tuition. "

My Opinion wrote on Feb 12, 2008 5:50 PM:

" UND Law School should work harder to get it's reputation up. It's not a well-recognized or well-thought of law school. With the rep up - your graduates get better jobs and the post-graduate contributions increase. I went to a small "little ivy league" school and the contributions of the graduates is enormous. Many of us have gone on to well-respected and highly paid employment and many are reknown - that's how to get the law school to fund it's stuff. Raising tuition will only drive students to other law schools - which is probably better - better to see the world and get a real education rather than hang out in ND and get a below-average education. "

Dirty old farmer wrote on Feb 12, 2008 5:31 PM:

" Awww...well, I thought there were too many lawyers in this state anyhow.... "

But . . . wrote on Feb 12, 2008 2:24 PM:

" I thought back home was the Garden of Eden? "

Former student wrote on Feb 12, 2008 10:52 AM:

" Maybe now students will leave UND to find a better law school where what they pay is more in line with the education they get. My money would have been better spent at a different school. And with tuition hiked, I would have sought out a better school. Perhaps that will be the trend. Go east, young lawyers--where the education is better, and jobs pay enough to actually support you and your school loans after graduation. You won't find that here anymore, sadly. "

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