A Passion for Teaching and the Law

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Karen Rubin

Karen Rubin, a 1985 graduate of 老澳门六合彩官方开奖鈥檚 Cleveland Marshall College of Law, has been passionate about teaching for as long as she can remember. She recalls playing school as a child and forcing her sisters to be the students so she could pretend to be a teacher. For the past eight years, Rubin has had the opportunity to teach in real life 鈥 and the opportunity to do it at her alma mater makes it all the more cherished.  

鈥淭he opportunity to be at my alma mater and work with the next generation of lawyers is special to me,鈥 said Rubin.  

Rubin began as an adjunct professor at C|M|LAW in 2010, teaching Scholarly Legal Writing. In 2014, she shifted to teaching Legal Profession, a course that focuses on issues of legal ethics and professionalism that arise in the practice of law. In May 2018, Rubin was honored for her outstanding teaching with C|M|LAW鈥檚 Judge Richard Markus Adjunct Faculty Award, presented to one professor each year to recognize the importance of the practitioner鈥檚 perspective in academia and the unique expertise that adjunct faculty bring to the classroom. Judge Markus, a retired Ohio Court of Appeals judge and former adjunct professor himself, presented the award to Rubin at the College鈥檚 commencement ceremony. 

鈥淭his is such an honor for me,鈥 said Rubin of winning the award. 鈥淛udge Markus is one of my heroes 鈹 every Ohio litigator knows of his treatise on trial practice, and he is legendary as an excellent judge.鈥 

In her day job, as counsel at Thompson Hine, Rubin鈥檚 practice has a focus on judicial ethics. She works on resolving conflicts of interest, assists the marketing department in complying with ethics rules and handles the challenges that arise from a national practice with offices in four different jurisdictions with four different sets of ethics regulations.

Rubin has served as the chair of the Cleveland Metropolitan Bar Association鈥檚 Certified Grievance Committee, as well as the chair of the Ohio State Bar Association鈥檚 Ethics Committee. She also publishes Law for Lawyers Today, a blog that is a resource for lawyers who need information to keep up-to-date on the world of legal ethics.  

Being involved in real-world legal ethics issues, as well as tracking cases and disputes around the country for her blog, makes Rubin an ideal adjunct professor who carries real-world experience into the classroom. With professionalism and ethics often being very case specific, she sees it as a subject matter that aligns well with learning from a practitioner.  

鈥淥ut in the real world, we have to deal with ethics issues every day 鈥 whether it鈥檚 conflicts of interest, how to handle client funds, whether to cite adverse legal authority to a judge, how to balance candor to a court with your duty to your clients, and many others,鈥 Rubin said. 鈥淎 practitioner鈥檚 perspective can be helpful because we鈥檙e able to put some flesh on the bones of a subject that might seem very abstract,鈥 

It鈥檚 not all real-world examples in Rubin鈥檚 class, however. She also plays clips from the TV series 鈥淏etter Call Saul鈥 to demonstrate ethical issues 鈥揳 teaching tool that has been popular with students.   

Rubin鈥檚 goal is to prepare her students for an entire professional career of ethical practice, in addition to passing the Multistate Professional Responsibility Exam. If they do find themselves in a troublesome situation, she imparts to them an ultimate takeaway that will serve them well in practice and life:  

鈥淚f you do get into ethics trouble, reach out for help 鈥 never bury your head in the sand.鈥