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CLEO: Your Ultimate Guide to Diversity in Legal Education

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.

What is CLEO? A 30-Second Summary

Imagine the path to becoming a lawyer is a steep, treacherous mountain climb. For many, the path is well-marked, and they have guides who have made the journey before. But for others—perhaps you're the first in your family to even consider this climb, or you come from a community where lawyers seem like a world away—the path is unmarked, the gear is unfamiliar, and the summit feels impossibly distant. This is where CLEO comes in. The Council on Legal Education Opportunity, or CLEO, is the experienced, trusted guide for that climb. It doesn't carry you up the mountain, but it provides the map, the essential gear, the training, and the community of fellow climbers to ensure you not only reach the summit but thrive there. For over 50 years, CLEO has been the single most important organization dedicated to diversifying America's legal profession by helping students from underrepresented and disadvantaged backgrounds successfully navigate the path to law school and beyond.

Part 1: The Mission and History of CLEO

The Story of CLEO: A Legacy of the Civil Rights Movement

The story of CLEO is inseparable from the story of the `civil_rights_movement`. In the mid-1960s, America was in a period of profound social upheaval. Landmark legislation like the `civil_rights_act_of_1964` and the `voting_rights_act_of_1965` had been passed, but the promise of equality was far from a reality. The legal profession, one of the most powerful institutions in the country, remained overwhelmingly white and male. Visionaries within the `american_bar_association` (ABA), the Association of American Law Schools (AALS), and the federal government recognized a critical problem: you cannot have `equal_justice_under_law` if the people who practice, interpret, and create the law do not reflect the diversity of the nation they serve. In 1968, fueled by a grant from the `office_of_economic_opportunity` and the spirit of the era, these organizations came together to form the Council on Legal Education Opportunity. Its mission was clear and urgent: to expand opportunities for minority and low-income students to attend law school. The founders, including legal giants and civil rights advocates, understood that talent is distributed equally, but opportunity is not. CLEO was designed to be the bridge over that opportunity gap. It was a bold experiment, a direct response to a national crisis, and a belief that a more just society requires a more diverse legal community.

CLEO's Guiding Principles: The Pillars of the Program

From its inception, CLEO has been built on a set of core beliefs that continue to guide its work today. It's not just a prep program; it's a comprehensive developmental pipeline.

Part 2: A Deep Dive into CLEO's Programs

CLEO isn't a single program but a ladder of opportunities designed to support a student at various stages of their journey to becoming a lawyer. Understanding which program fits your needs is the first step.

The CLEO Program Ladder: From Freshman to J.D.

CLEO's programs are structured to meet you where you are. Here’s a breakdown of the key offerings, moving from early college to just before law school.

Program Name Target Audience Key Focus Duration
CLEO Legally Inspired College Scholars (CLICKS) College Freshmen & Sophomores Early exposure to the legal profession, mentorship, and building a pre-law roadmap. One-day virtual workshops or ongoing mentorship.
Road to Law School (RTLS) College Juniors & Seniors `lsat` preparation, personal statement workshops, and application strategy. Multi-week virtual program.
1L Prep - Attitude Is Essential (AIE) Admitted Law Students Intensive “boot camp” on legal reasoning, writing, and the skills needed to excel in the first year (1L). Multi-day seminars, often held regionally.
Pre-Law Summer Institute (PLSI) College Graduates preparing to enter law school The flagship program. A multi-week, residential, and highly intensive simulation of the first semester of law school. 4-6 weeks (residential).

The Flagship: The Pre-Law Summer Institute (PLSI)

The PLSI is CLEO's most renowned and transformative program. For over 50 years, it has been the gold standard for preparing students for the rigors of legal education.

The Foundation: CLEO Scholars Program

Becoming a “CLEO Scholar” is the designation given to students who successfully complete one of the core preparatory programs, most notably the PLSI. This isn't just a title; it's an identity that carries significant weight and benefits.

Part 3: How to Become a CLEO Scholar: A Step-by-Step Guide

The application process for CLEO's programs is rigorous, but it's a journey that, in itself, prepares you for the detailed work of a law school application.

Step 1: Self-Assessment and Program Selection

  1. Review Your Eligibility: Carefully read the eligibility requirements on the official CLEO website (cleoinc.org). CLEO is primarily for U.S. citizens or permanent residents who come from economically or educationally disadvantaged backgrounds or underrepresented racial/ethnic groups.
  2. Choose the Right Program: Are you a college sophomore just starting to explore law? CLICKS is for you. A senior getting ready to apply? Focus on the Road to Law School program or the PLSI. Have you already been accepted to law school? The AIE program is your target. Don't apply to the wrong program.

Step 2: Assemble Your Application Materials

  1. The Application Form: This will require detailed information about your personal background, family history, economic status, and academic record. Be thorough and honest.
  2. Personal Statement: This is your chance to tell your story. Why do you want to be a lawyer? What obstacles have you overcome? How will your unique perspective contribute to the legal profession? This is arguably the most important part of your application. Connect your personal journey to CLEO's mission.
  3. Letters of Recommendation: Choose recommenders who know you well and can speak to your academic abilities, character, and resilience. This could be a professor, an employer, or a mentor. Give them plenty of notice and provide them with your personal statement and resume.
  4. Transcripts: You will need official transcripts from every college or university you have attended.
  5. LSAT Score (if applicable): While CLEO looks beyond the numbers, your `lsat` score is still a required component for programs like the PLSI.

Step 3: Crafting a Compelling Narrative

  1. Connect the Dots: Your application should tell a coherent story. The selection committee wants to see not just a collection of grades and scores, but a person with a clear purpose and immense potential.
  2. Show, Don't Tell: Instead of saying you are “resilient,” describe a specific challenge you faced and how you overcame it. Instead of saying you are “passionate about justice,” tell a story that illustrates that passion.
  3. Proofread Meticulously: A legal career depends on attention to detail. An application riddled with typos sends the wrong message. Read it aloud, have a trusted mentor review it, and then read it again.

Step 4: The Interview and Selection Process

  1. Preparation is Key: If you are selected for an interview, treat it like the most important job interview of your life. Research common interview questions, prepare answers that reflect your personal story, and have thoughtful questions ready to ask the interviewer.
  2. Understand the Timeline: CLEO programs have strict deadlines. Mark them on your calendar and aim to submit your application well in advance to avoid any last-minute technical issues.

Part 4: The Impact of CLEO: Success Stories and Statistics

The true measure of CLEO's success isn't just in the number of students it serves, but in the profound impact those students have on the legal profession and society.

By the Numbers: CLEO's 50+ Year Legacy

Case Study: The Honorable Johnnie B. Rawlinson

  1. The Backstory: Judge Rawlinson grew up in a segregated community in the South. She became a CLEO Fellow in 1976.
  2. The Journey: With the foundation she gained from CLEO, she went on to graduate from McGeorge School of Law and embarked on a distinguished career. She served as a Deputy District Attorney and rose through the ranks in the U.S. Attorney's Office in Nevada.
  3. The Impact Today: In 2000, she was appointed by President Bill Clinton to the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, one of the most powerful courts in the nation. She was the first African-American woman to serve on that court. Her story is a powerful testament to how CLEO identifies and nurtures talent that might otherwise have been overlooked, enriching the entire federal `judiciary`.

Case Study: The Modern CLEO Scholar

While stories of famous judges are inspiring, the core of CLEO's work is seen in thousands of everyday legal heroes.

  1. The Backstory: Consider a hypothetical but typical scholar: a first-generation college student from a low-income, immigrant family. She excels in college but is intimidated by the `law_school_admissions` process and feels she doesn't belong in the elite world of law.
  2. The CLEO Intervention: She participates in the PLSI. For the first time, she is surrounded by peers with similar backgrounds and professors who believe in her. She learns the “secret language” of law school—how to brief a case, how to survive a cold call, how to write a legal memo.
  3. The Impact Today: She graduates from law school and becomes a public defender in her home community. She is a zealous advocate for her clients because she understands their struggles. She becomes a role model, a mentor, and a beacon of hope, directly fulfilling the foundational mission of CLEO.

Part 5: The Future of CLEO

Today's Battlegrounds: Diversity in the Post-Affirmative Action Era

The legal landscape for diversity initiatives is changing rapidly. The 2023 `supreme_court` decision in Students for Fair Admissions v. Harvard effectively ended the use of race-conscious `affirmative_action` in college and university admissions.

On the Horizon: How CLEO is Adapting and Innovating

See Also