Paralegal Technology Program āgrowing and evolvingā to benefit students
Precious Vines-Harris finds herself at home on the Ļć½¶Šć campus overseeing the Collegeās Paralegal Technology Program.
As director of the program, in which she also serves as an instructor, Vines-Harris said she has seen many changes since she joined Ļć½¶Šć seven years ago.
āWhen I started [at Ļć½¶Šć], the paralegal program had an associate degree and three certificates. Our curriculum now focuses on an associate degree and diploma,ā Vines-Harris said. āWe are growing and evolving. We are offering what benefits our students the most as they work toward a career.ā
The paralegal program keeps up with trends in the legal and paralegal fields. Vines-Harris, who earned both her undergraduate and law degrees at N.C. Central University, said that the program is doing things never done before at Ļć½¶Šć. In the vein of growth, the program received a planned gift from the Beulah M. Latta Trust to establish a $200,000 endowment to fund scholarships for paralegal technology students.
āWe were grateful for the philanthropic support and now are looking into how to capitalize on the endowment. We are looking at everything from AI and legal technology to other innovative teaching tools to draw students to the program,ā Vines-Harris said.
The spendable interest generated by the endowment provides for student scholarships in perpetuity, specifically, four scholarships at $2,000 per recipient, with $10,000 being put toward other program endeavors.
āWe are proud to help students pay for the program that will lead them toward doing great things in their community," Vines-Harris said. āWith the $10,000, we are going into uncharted territory and building a mock courtroom and a law innovation computer lab along with a small law library, all of which will be housed at Ļć½¶Šćās Northern Durham Center campus.
āThese program improvements and tangible assets will benefit other Ļć½¶Šć programs,ā Vines-Harris said. āBasic Law Enforcement Training and Criminal Justice will use the new facilities, as will continuing education.ā
Durham community partners will also be invited to use the mock courtroom and lab. With the field changing so rapidly, the facilities will give each entity using them one more experiential activity from which to learn.
āWe are making Ļć½¶Šćās paralegal program accessible while maintaining a prominent level of instruction and assets. We do both through an awareness of legal trends, a curriculum heavy in experiential activities and affordability,ā Vines-Harris said. āThe affordability is always there, but more so when you factor in the scholarships now available. We pride ourselves on putting students into careers where they make an impact.ā
To learn more about supporting people, programs, and places at Ļć½¶Šć, please contact the Ļć½¶Šć Foundation at foundation@durhamtech.edu or (919) 536-7254.