VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW
JOHN POTTS, PROFESSOR OF LAW
Spring 2009 Syllabus
page three
Attendance
Policy
Copyright © 2009 by John J. Potts
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policy last
modified January 9, 2009
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Accreditation of an American
law school requires that the law school require that students attend every
class in every course. Valparaiso
University School of Law's bulletin, 2005-2006, 2006-07, and 2007-08, includes
the following language:
Attendance
Regular
and punctual attendance is necessary to satisfy ABA residency and class hour
requirements. Each student is
expected to attend every class session for each course for which he or she is
enrolled. Professors will enforce
the attendance policy and must announce the method of enforcement at least one
week prior to its imposition. Any
student who does not comply with ABA attendance requirements is subject to
administrative withdrawal. When
absence is unavoidable, it is the responsibility of the student to explain to
the instructor(s) the reason(s) for the absence and to learn what make-up work
may be required. Whenever
possible, the student should provide advance notice of absences by notifying
the instructor(s). When an
emergency situation occurs that prevents a student from contacting an
instructor, the student should contact either the Law Registrar or the
Associate Dean for Academic Affairs so that instructors can be notified.
VALPARAISO UNIVERSITY
BULLETIN, Volume 79, Number 2, page 29, August 2005; Volume 81, Number 2, page
31, August 2007.
I do not have authority to waive the attendance
requirement.
My personal views on
attendance requirements have changed over time. I was born in the first half of the last century. I went to
college in the '60s. I considered
attendance requirements to be M-I-C-K-E-Y M-O-U-S-E, although I attended class
well. A few students here taught
me that I was wrong.
Once, with heavy heart, I
assigned the grade AW to a student after he had taken the final exam. He was a graduating third-year student ... until then. If he had received the grade F, he
would have graduated (under the rules at the time). But with the AW, he could not and did not graduate on time.
Only after the final exam did
I learn that I had one more exam than students. Someone enrolled for credit had not attended class. I took the matter to the
registrar. There was a student on
the list with an "A" next to his name. I had taken the "A" to mean Audit. The registrar informed me that the
computer system had changed. An
"A" previously meant Audit, but then meant Add. The student had added the course.
The course was Federal Income
Taxation of Corporations & Partnerships. Only ladies took the course that semester, which was unusual
but providential. The student with
an "A" next to his name was a gentleman. It was clear to me that he had not been there. To his credit, he admitted it.
If I had let it go, the law
school would have given credit for a course that the student did not take,
whereas the accreditation attendance requirement prevents accreditation of
correspondence law schools.
Some students want to know how
many classes they can miss. The
answer is contained in the law school policy stated above, which I do not have
authority to waive.
But, really, how many classes
can be missed?
Really, none.
I do not enforce the policy
mechanically, however, although an argument can be made to do so. I have neither the time nor the
inclination. Neither, however, may
I ignore the matter as I would personally prefer.
If you have a problem, work
with me and I'll work with you.
Talk to me about the situation early. Always memorialize the essentials of the communication in an
email to me. Sometimes special
means can be used to substitute for a very limited number of missed classes.
I won't do anything about one
or two missed classes, and I won't personally care. I have needed slack at times in my life, and I give slack
when I can.
When, then, will there be
enforcement? And how can the
hassle of dealing with these matters be minimized, for you and for me, while
allowing me to fulfill my responsibility?
Attendance sheets will be
used. If I learn, however I learn
it, that a student missed the equivalent of three weeks of class in a regular
semester without making special arrangements, the student is subject to
assignment of the grade AW - Administrative Withdrawal - and its
consequences. Three weeks of
classes is over 20% of meeting time.
The artful non-attender who
shows up to sign in and skip out should understand that he is in attendance
only when he is in attendance. The
artful non-attender who misses classes up to the mechanical enforcement trip
wire will find that, having played the system, he has used up his slack. If he misses one more class he is
subject to assignment of the grade AW, no matter how good his excuse. He needs to have made special
arrangements regarding the previously missed classes. The enforcement trip wire is not permission to have been
gone previously.
Thus, this is not permission
to miss three weeks of classes without making special arrangements. It is not permission to miss any
classes.
Assignment of the grade AW is
not punitive. It simply reflects
that the student receiving the grade has not done what is necessary to be
considered as having taken the course.
A student in a coma for all 14 weeks of the semester has not taken the
course, although he is without moral fault in the matter.
Most of you attend class
very well. _I apologize to you for going into
these matters. The comments are
not aimed at you.