National Moot Court Competition Teams
In the past decade, Loyola University Chicago School of Law has achieved a distinguished record in regional and national moot court competitions.
- 2011-2012 Moot Court Awards
- 2010-2011 Moot Court Awards
- 2009-2010 Moot Court Awards
- 2008-2009 Moot Court Awards
- 2007-2008 Moot Court Awards
- 2006-2007 Moot Court Awards
- 2005-2006 Moot Court Awards
- 2004-2005 Moot Court Awards
- 2003-2004 Moot Court Awards
- 2002-2003 Moot Court Awards
- 2001-2002 Moot Court Awards
- 2000-2001 Moot Court Awards
The moot court process allows law students to develop oral and written advocacy skills, to compete with students from law schools across the nation, and to meet practitioners and jurists in their chosen field of law.
Students are selected to compete on Moot Court teams by the members of the Moot Court Board, who evaluate briefs submitted by applicants, and assess each applicant's oral argument skills. With over 200 applicants each year vying for only 55 positions, admission into the program is highly competitive. Students who demonstrate exceptional oral and written advocacy skills will be invited to represent Loyola at competitions. Members of all Loyola teams are prepared for competition through the Honors Appellate Advocacy Program, an intensive course focusing on advanced legal research, brief writing, oral arguments, and the components of appellate procedure. This course, which is unique to Loyola, refines the skills learned in the first year legal writing course and the advocacy course taken by all students, and is designed to assist in the training and preparation of the law school's moot court competition teams. Several distinguished speakers from the Chicago legal community are invited to address the teams. The class also functions as a workshop to allow students the opportunity to work on oral advocacy skills in preparation for competition.
Currently, Loyola fields approximately 20 Moot Court competition teams. Faculty, alumni and other members of the bar serve as coaches for the teams.
Teams in these competitions are open to all incoming second-, third- and fourth-year students. However, the members of Loyola's team in the National Moot Court Competition are chosen only from among incoming third-year participants in the Intra-School Moot Court Competition.
2012-2013 MOOT COURT BOARD

(left to right) Lauren Parker, Corinne Koopman, Shepard Simpson, and James D'Angelo
Chief Justice: Lauren Parker
Financial Director: James D'Angelo
Publicity Director: Corinne Koopman
In-House Director: Shepard Simpson
Moot Court Teams
- American Bar Association National Appellate Advocacy Competition
- Appellate Lawyers Association Moot Court Team
- Chicago Bar Association Moot Court Competition
- Frederick Douglass Moot Court Competition
- Jessup International Law Moot Court Competition
- National Child Welfare and Adoption Law Moot Court Competition
- National Health Law Moot Court Competition
- National Hispanic Bar Association Moot Court Competition
- National Moot Court Competition
- National Moot Court Tax Team
- Giles Sutherland Rich Intellectual Property Law Moot Court Competition
- Saul Lefkowitz Moot Court Competition
- Thomas Tang Moot Court Competition
- Wagner National Labor and Employment Law Moot Court Competition
- Houston Invitational Moot Court Competition
- Moot Court Teams' Alternates
- The Gibbons Criminal Law Moot Court Competition
- The Vanderbilt First Amendment Moot Court Competition