Court
News Ohio
Middle School Students
Participate in Fastest Growing Civics
Program
By
Jenna Gant
April
15, 2013
"In
the beginning it's like 'ahh, what are you going to do,'
and then once you get into the trial you get a lot more ease and it's a
lot
more comfortable,” said Leon Durrenberger, Hastings Middle School
Seventh
Grader.
Leon
is one of more than 300 middle school students across Ohio
who traveled to the Thomas J. Moyer Ohio Judicial Center on April 11-12
to act
as attorneys and witnesses during the 2013 Ohio Center for Law-Related
Education Middle School Mock Trial Program
OCLRE
made the novel, Roll of Thunder, Hear Me Cry into a mock
trial. The character in the book is accused of murder when a robbery
gets
botched. The students started practicing for the mock trial in January.
“We
prepared and talked about what was going to happen at the
trial ... and we made our cross and direct questions and our opening
and
closing statements,” Durrenberger said.
OCLRE
Executive Director Lisa Eschleman said the students earn
points by demonstrating a professional demeanor and good speaking
skills, as
well as understanding their side’s argument and courtroom procedure.
“What
is critically important at the middle school mock trial is
that it combines the best of language arts with social studies,” said
Eschleman. “It's based on literature that the students are already
reading in
middle school and then the social studies components, we have taken
that
literature and turned it into a mock trial case file.”
Eschleman
said judges have told her that these students are as
polished at some high school groups. She said that is promising for the
future
of mock trial programs.
"It
is really, really fun, and I hope this continues on for a
lot of years,” Durrenberger said. “I'm going to do this next year and
then I'm
going to do the high school one.”
See
the video at Court News Ohio
|