Dennis Tonsing's two decades as a California litigator provide the essential platform for his message to law students across the country - when you begin law school, you are beginning the "practice of law." School's over. Those who consider their days from law school orientation until the bar exam as "school" may be good students. Those who approach those 1000 days as "practice" for the real thing will be good lawyers. That's the message he delivered to thousands of law students, starting with his developing and directing the first Academic Support Program at Vermont Law School. Following his years at Vermont, he initiated and directed the Academic Support Program at Roger Williams University in Rhode Island, where he also served as Dean of Students. During the years 1999 to 2007, he was a sought after speaker at law schools, workshops and seminars around the country. In 2007, he moved to South America, where he continued to help law students sharpen their skills, primarily for excelling on law school essay exams and passing the California State Bar Examination, through his continuing work for law schools, and through his web page for law students at http://1000DaystotheBar.weebly.com. Former students continue to succeed long after law school, because they "hit the ground running" after treating their law school experience as a preparation for the professional practice. Florida lawyer Jerry L. Godding sums it up when he writes, "Tonsing's techniques, diligently applied, have been instrumental not only in helping me graduate from law school but also passing bar exams. In the four years following law school, I have passed five bar examinations using tips from Professor Tonsing's book. '1000 Days to the Bar' is the most useful tool available, I highly recommend it." After living for eleven years in South America, Dennis Tonsing currently resides in Arizona, where he serves as a distinguished core professor for JFK School of Law at Northcentral University.
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