South Texas College of Law Houston (STCL or South Texas) is a privatelaw school in Houston, Texas. Founded in 1923, it is accredited by the American Bar Association. South Texas College of Law Houston is the oldest law school in the city of Houston.[4] It was founded in 1923 when the YMCA made the decision to establish a law school with a focus on offering night classes for working professionals.
For the class entering in 2023, South Texas accepted 44.04% of applicants, with 41.98% of those accepted enrolling, and the average enrollee had a 153 LSAT score and 3.36 undergraduate GPA.[6]
For 2024, U.S. News & World ReportRankings of Best Law Schools ranked South Texas College of Law overall tied at 150th out of the 196 accredited law schools in the United States, and its part-time program was ranked 48th in the country out of the 68 law schools considered.[7]
South Texas College of Law Houston has won 136 national championships in advocacy.[8][9] Its trial advocacy program consistently ranks in the top 10 of the nation.[10] The College of Law’s moot court program was ranked 1st in the nation according to data compiled by the University of Houston Law Center’s Blakely Advocacy Institute in 2018 and has consistently ranked in the top 4 ever since.[11] Its trial advocacy program was ranked 3rd in the country (tied with Stetson University and American University) for 2023 by U.S. News & World Report.[12] The College of Law’s Alternate Dispute Resolution Program (ADR), where students compete in competitive mediations, negotiations, and as mediators, in 2020 was ranked by U.S. News & World Report 31st in the nation.[13] Additionally, PreLaw Magazine named South Texas College of Law Houston as "Top Law School for ADR".[14]
Of the South Texas College of Law Houston graduates who took the Texas bar exam for the first time in July 2021, 80.89% passed, vs the overall passage rate of 80.47% for all other law schools of the State of Texas.[15]
According to South Texas College of Law Houston's official 2021 ABA-required disclosures, 66% of the class of 2021 obtained full-time, long-term, JD-required employment (i.e., as attorneys) nine months after graduation.[16]
South Texas College of Law Houston publishes several student-edited journals of legal scholarship, including Corporate Counsel Review, Currents: Journal of International Economic Law, South Texas Law Review, Texas Journal of Business Law, and Hispanic Journal of Law and Policy
South Texas Law Review is a student-edited quarterly legal journal published at the South Texas College of Law Houston. It was established in 1954. The review publishes scholarly works as well as comments and case notes. South Texas Law Review has published symposium issues on a wide range of topics. Since 1994, the review and the law school have hosted an annual ethics symposium during the fall semester where authors present papers on the year's topic which are published by the review in a subsequent volume.
Currents (ISSN1534-388X) is the official journal of international economic law at South Texas College of Law Houston first published in the winter of 1991 and published twice annually by the law student members and editors, who receive academic credit for writing projects and staff participation.
South Texas sponsors the "Direct Representation Clinics", which provide legal representation to low-income residents of Harris County, Texas, in the areas of family law, probate, estate planning, and guardianship cases.[17] South Texas is also the first Texas law school to provide $400 each month toward student-loan indebtedness for its alumni working for nonprofit legal-aid organizations that provide services to the poor.[18]
Total cost of tuition is $35,550 for 2020, for both in-state and out-of-state students.[19] South Texas College of Law continues to be the 6th least expensive law school in Texas out of a total of 10.[20] The total cost of attendance (indicating the cost of tuition, fees, and living expenses) at South Texas for the 2017–2018 academic year was $56,000.[21]
In 1998, South Texas College of Law Houston (at that time, called South Texas College of Law) tried to merge with Texas A&M University under a private/public partnership. Under the proposal, the law school would have remained a private school, but would have been branded as the Texas A&M Law Center and would have awarded law degrees under the A&M seal.[22] The deal went sour after a lengthy legal fight with the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board, the governing body of the state's public institutions. The courts ruled that the schools had failed to obtain the board's approval before entering into the agreement.[23] The University of Houston and other institutions voiced concern about the partnership.[24] In 2013, Texas A&M University entered into a similar arrangement with the Texas Wesleyan School of Law in Fort Worth, Texas, thereby creating the Texas A&M University School of Law.[25]
Until mid-2016, the law school was called "South Texas College of Law". On June 22, 2016, the day on which South Texas College of Law announced a name change to "Houston College of Law", the University of Houston (which has its college of law within the University of Houston Law Center) announced that the University was "concerned about the significant confusion this creates in the marketplace and will take any and all appropriate legal actions to protect the interests of our institution, our brand, and our standing in the communities we serve."[26] The University of Houston System filed a lawsuit on June 27, 2016, in the United States District Court in Houston.[27][28] On October 14, 2016, the U.S. District Court issued a preliminary injunction requiring that South Texas College of law stop using the name "Houston College of Law," pending further developments in the case.[29]
On November 7, 2016, the dean of the law school announced that the name would be changed to "South Texas College of Law Houston".[30]
This section is missing information about the kind of degree and date granted usually supplied for alumni . Please expand the section to include this information. Further details may exist on the talk page.(May 2024)
^Complaint, docket entry 1, June 27, 2016, The Board of Regents of the University of Houston System on behalf of the University of Houston System and its Member Institutions; The University of Houston System; and The Board of Regents of the University of Houston System, Plaintiffs v. South Texas College of Law, Defendant, case no. 16-cv-01839, U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas.