Finding a Faculty Mentor

Anyone considering a career in academia will benefit from insider advice about navigating the process. If you formed a close relationship with a law professor while in law school, you should consider reaching out to them for advice. Here are some other tips to consider when trying to find a mentor:

Consider these three places to start at your alma mater:

  1. Contact faculty from the law school you attended (or are attending) who are likely to remember you positively. Ask if they would be willing to talk to you about the teaching market and/or your research interests, or recommend someone else who could.
  2. Identify the faculty recruiting chair at your law school. Ask them to help you locate advisors either from the faculty or someone else they know who has a reputation for mentoring candidates. Typically information about hiring chairs can be found beginning in late July at PrawfsBlawg: Getting a Job on the Law Teaching Market.
  3. Contact the director of career placement services and ask them for referrals to recent alums who entered the teaching market. Seek out their assistance and guidance in navigating the process.

Conferences

If possible, attend conferences sponsored by law schools or scholarly associations and organizations. The AALS website and various listservs list upcoming conferences and symposia. Network with the speakers and panelists who are presenting papers on topics that interest you. Tell them about your interest in law teaching, your background and qualifications, and ask for suggestions they might have on how to enter the legal academy.

Affinity Groups

John Mercer Langston Writing Workshop: The mission of this group is to provide support to Black men law faculty and aspiring law faculty. 

LatCrit/SALT Faculty Development Workshop is designed for critical, progressive, and social justice-oriented pre-tenure professors, including clinicians and legal writing professors, as well as those who may be contemplating a career in law teaching. www.saltlaw.org

Lutie Lytle Collective: The mission of this group is to provide support to Black women law faculty and aspiring law faculty. There is typically a conference in mid-June. There is also an email list. To request access email [email protected].

Workshop for AAPI and MENA Women in Legal Academy: The mission of this group is to support and mentor legal academics and aspiring academics of Asian descent or Middle Eastern and/or North African descent.  For more information contact [email protected].