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Fall 2025 Clinic

Education Law Clinic: Movement Lawyering

To learn more about the Clinical Curriculum and Registration, please visit our Clinical Registration Center. You can also find more information on How to Register for Clinics and How Clinical Credits Work.

For more information about this clinic, please visit the Clinic Website and OCP Blog Highlights.

Enrollment in this clinic will fulfill the HLS JD pro bono requirement.

Required Class Component: Movement Lawyering with Youth (2 fall classroom credits). This clinic and course are bundled; your enrollment in this clinic will automatically enroll you in the required course.

Additional Co-/Pre-Requisites: None.

By Permission: No.

Add/Drop Deadline: Early drop of August 1, 2025.

LLM Students: LLM students may enroll in this clinic through Helios.

Placement Site: HLS.

The Education Law Clinic is part of the Youth Advocacy & Policy Lab (Y-Lab). Y-Lab’s mission is to advocate for the creation of youth-serving systems that are trauma-sensitive, healing-centered, and antiracist and that center the voices of young people in decisions that impact them. Students in this clinic will participate in Y-Lab’s Students Speak initiative, which is working to foster a movement for youth voice and power in educational decision making in Massachusetts. Clinic students will support the work of the Students Speak Youth Leadership Team (YLT)—a group of 14 secondary school students from across Massachusetts—to engage their peers in a youth action cycle designed to collectively identify legal remedies that could promote greater youth participation in school-based decision making—and then to advocate together to achieve these remedies. Each clinic student will personally mentor 1-2 youth leaders, coaching them in the development of their leadership and advocacy skills. Together clinic students and youth leaders will co-facilitate focus groups and discussions with broader groups of young people in communities across the state. As young people identify issues of concern in their schools, clinic students will support the YLT to identify common themes and potential solutions. Clinic students will use their burgeoning legal and analytical skills to help the youth translate their desired solutions into feasible legal remedies and then assess and implement various advocacy strategies, which could include legislative advocacy, administrative advocacy, media and communications, and even possibly litigation. At all points, clinic students will be learning how to strike a careful balance in their lawyering between providing necessary scaffolding for their clients to make informed decisions and ensuring that young people authentically lead the direction of the work.

Specific clinic activities will vary depending on the semester and where the young people are in their action cycle, but could potentially include: supporting secondary school students to testify at the Massachusetts legislature and before other public bodies; meeting directly with members of the legislature, the education bureaucracy, and their staff; organizing a legislative briefing; organizing a statewide, day-long Youth Summit; drafting and distributing media advisories, op-eds, and press releases; communicating with and rallying constituents to advocate with their lawmakers; organizing an agenda for and participating in a coalition meeting; using branding and media as strategies for effectively conveying a message; using empirical research as part of an advocacy strategy; and drafting legislation.

Students who enroll in this clinic should be sure that they have at least 2 afternoons free Tue-Thu each week to enable work with youth leaders during afterschool hours. This clinic will also involve some travel to youth programs within an hour of metro Boston and the clinic will provide transportation. Students will be expected to spend a substantial portion of their clinical hours in person in the Yellow House (23 Everett Street) to foster teamwork and enable group planning. Beginning in the third week of the semester, students will be required to attend a one-hour weekly team meeting each Tuesday morning from 9:00-10:00 am. Also, please be sure to consult the course description for the co-requisite seminar, Movement Lawyering for Youth, to review the unique course schedule.

Successful completion of appropriate written work in this offering satisfies the professional writing requirement for matriculants to the J.D. program from 2023 onward.