Ronald H. Brown Prep Program for College Students Receives ABA’s Alexander Award

April 13, 2011

The American Bar Association Council for Racial and Ethnic Diversity in the Educational Pipeline has named the Ronald H. Brown Prep Program for College Students the recipient of its 2011 Alexander Award for Excellence in Pipeline Diversity.  The Alexander Award recognizes an individual or organization for success in working along the educational pipeline in a collaborative approach involving more than one segment of the continuum from elementary to high school to college to law school to the practice.

Celebrating a milestone fifth anniversary this year, the Prep Program is one of several path-breaking initiatives of the Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development at St. John’s School of Law. Established in 1999 in memory of Ronald H. Brown ’70, who paved the way for African Americans in government service and the law, the RHB Center aims to engage in legal studies, research and outreach focusing on issues that affect the lives of underrepresented people, increase the racial and socioeconomic diversity of the legal profession, and educate law students to be leaders on issues of racial, economic and social justice.

In partnership with John Jay College of Criminal Justice/CUNY Department of Latin American and Latina/o Studies; Medgar Evers College/CUNY; St. John’s University; United Negro College Fund Colleges; and York College/CUNY, the RHB Center founded the Prep Program to encourage students from underrepresented backgrounds − often the first members of their family to attend college − to apply to law school and pursue the study and practice of law.

Through a rigorous selection process, each undergraduate college selects sophomores to participate in a nine-week summer program during which they take law school courses taught by St. John’s faculty, engage in internships with judges and lawyers in a variety of practice settings, and receive ample guidance on the law school admissions process. Students who successfully complete the program for sophomores can apply to participate in the program for juniors the following summer, when they take a comprehensively designed LSAT prep course.

In recent years, Prep Program participants have increased their LSAT scores by an average of 10 points. More importantly, over 80 percent of program graduates have been accepted to at least one law school, including:

  • American University
  • Boston College
  • Duke University
  • George Washington University
  • Georgetown University
  • New York University
  • St. John’s University
  • University of California Davis
  • University of California Los Angeles
  • University of Michigan
  • University of Pennsylvania
  • Wake Forest University
  • Yale University

“The Prep Program’s success is a tribute to the hard work and dedication of our students and faculty and reflects the Law School’s commitment to fostering a more accessible and diverse legal profession” said Leonard M. Baynes, Program Director, Director of the Ronald H. Brown Center and Professor of Law at St. John’s. “We are honored to receive this year’s Alexander Award and look forward to continuing to evolve the Prep Program to meet the needs of its participants and the legal community,” added Michael A. Simons, the Law School’s Dean and John V. Brennan Professor of Law and Ethics.  “A commitment to diversity is at the heart of our mission, and the Prep Program is an investment in the future of the legal profession.”

The Alexander Award is named for Raymond Pace and Sade Tanner Mossell Alexander. Raymond Alexander was Wharton’s first African American graduate, a multi-term president of the National Bar Association, and the first black judge on the Common Pleas Court of Philadelphia. In the early 1930s, he took two Chester County school districts to court in a racial segregation case. His victory ended de jure segregation in Pennsylvania schools. Sadie Alexander, Raymond’s wife, was the first African American woman to receive a Ph.D. in the United States, the first woman to receive a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and the first national president of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Incorporated.

The ABA Council for Racial and Ethnic Diversity in the Educational Pipeline (formerly the ABA Presidential Advisory Council on Diversity) works to increase the number of diverse students who are on track to becoming lawyers. The Pipeline Council acts as a think-tank and programmatic incubator for activities that foster a more diverse educational pipeline into the legal profession.; providing a forum for key stakeholders to address particular issues and build networks for change in educational systems and the legal profession.

For more information about the Ronald H. Brown Prep Program for College Students and other initiatives of the Ronald H. Brown Center for Civil Rights and Economic Development at St. John’s Law School, contact baynesl@stjohns.edu.