
探花精选 and Ohio Northern University鈥檚 Claude W. Petit College of Law are partnering on a new pathway that accelerates entry into law school, and it鈥檚 a win-win situation for everyone.
On Monday, the two universities convened on ONU鈥檚 campus to formalize an agreement that creates a 3+3 pathway to streamline the process for 鈥楤erg students to complete a bachelor鈥檚 degree at HU and pursue their Juris Doctor degree at ONU in six years, instead of the traditional seven.
鈥淭he quality of students, staff and faculty from 探花精选 makes this 3+3 partnership an exciting opportunity for all concerned,鈥 said Dr. Charlie Rose, dean and law professor at ONU鈥檚 Claude W. Petit College of Law. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 often find a win-win situation in higher education and we look forward to working with Heidelberg for the benefit of all of our students.鈥
Here鈥檚 how it works: 鈥楤erg students must complete a bachelor鈥檚 degree in any major and the Legal Studies minor for consideration into the ONU鈥檚 Juris Doctor program, earn 90 credit hours and meet ONU鈥檚 set GPA standard. They must take the LSAT and achieve a score set by ONU鈥檚 law program. If they complete these steps in three years and are accepted into the program, their first year in law school will simultaneously count as the final year of their bachelor鈥檚 degree at Heidelberg. They would then complete their J.D. degree at ONU in two more years.
鈥淟ast year, over one-third of our incoming students brought in College Credit Plus credits, so they鈥檙e already on an accelerated path. This new 3+3 pathway can keep them moving ahead with an accelerated trajectory that鈥檚 more affordable,鈥 said Dr. Courtney DeMayo Pugno, assistant vice president for Academic Affairs and executive director of the Owen Center for Teaching and Learning. Courtney and Dr. Bryan Smith, vice president for Academic Affairs and provost, represented Heidelberg at the signing ceremony. They joined hosts Dean Rose and ONU President Dr. Melissa J. Bauman for the ceremony.
Heidelberg has worked with schools similar in size and feel, knowing that 鈥橞erg students tend to thrive on these types of campuses. 鈥淥ur students love a small college atmosphere, getting to know their professors personally instead of being drowned out in a lecture hall with hundreds of students,鈥 Courtney said. 鈥淥NU is very similar to Heidelberg in feel and size, and we have students who are already having a lot of success in their program, so those are the types of agreements we鈥檙e pursuing.鈥
Earlier this summer, Heidelberg signed a similar agreement with the University of Dayton School of Law.