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» Outstanding Student Award

   
 

Katherine Anderson Sanchez

November 2010  

  

The VLP is delighted to announce

that Katherine “Katey” Anderson

Sanchez has been selected as our

Outstanding Law Student Volunteer

for the month of November.  Katey

is a 2L at the University of Arizona

and has volunteered in the VLP’s

minor guardianship clinic.  Katey

was the ultimate professional at

each of her clinics.  She was calm,

collected and efficient during

hearings without sacrificing her

empathy towards clients.  She is a role model for volunteers in this clinic and the

VLP is very proud to count her among our volunteers.

 

Katey brings a unique perspective to her law school class.  After completing a

Masters in Education from the University of Arizona, she worked as a Spanish

and Social Studies teacher for TUSD for six years.  Anyone willing to spend

their days with emotionally-charged, pre-teens in the midst of puberty has

some gumption, but Katey showed that she really is one tough cookie by

spending a year teaching at the Catalina Mountain School.  This facility is

operated by the Arizona Department of Juvenile Corrections in Tucson for

juvenile delinquent males.  At this facility, Katey helped develop individualized

curriculum plans for the students as well as aided in their preparation for the

G.E.D. exam.  During her teaching career, Katey advocated for student

progress and helped them develop success plans.  With her past history of

working with the disadvantaged within our society, it is not surprising that

Katey decided to begin advocating for those in need by volunteering with the

VLP.

 

Katey’s interest in the VLP was peaked during orientation as a 1L. “It seemed

like a fun and interesting way to get some real experience, not just reading and

writing,” Katey asserts.  When we asked Katey to tell us the most important

thing she learned from volunteering with the VLP, she replied, “I learned that it

is very important to translate legal speak into regular language for your clients.

Being in law school, we forget how to speak like humans and turn into Law

Robots.”  She continues, “Working with the VLP reminded me of the

importance of translating my words and thoughts into regular language.”

Fortunately, translating legal terminology comes easy to Katey.  Katey is a

bilingual Spanish speaker and served as a school-wide translator at the

schools she worked at.  She has also interpreted for the VLP’s Spanish-

speaking clients.  Her experience as an interpreter allows her to better relate

to clients and overcome the disconnect they feel when receiving legal advice

that sounds like it’s in another language.  It’s one of Katey’s most helpful traits.

 

A big contributor to Katey’s bilingualism is the fact that she studied abroad for

a semester in the Dominican Republic during her undergraduate studies at the

U of A.  She chose the Dominican Republic because she was in an

interdisciplinary and internationally focused B.A. program that allowed her to

focus on development in the Caribbean.  But she feel in love with the country

while she was there and now calls Puerta Plata, a city in the Dominican

Republic, her number one place to vacation.

 

In addition to her volunteer work with the VLP, Katey is impressively active on

the James E. Rogers College of Law campus.  She is a 2L writer for the Arizona

Journal for International and Comparative Law and the Secretary for the Latino

Law Student Association for the 2010-2011 school year.  Her favorite law school

professor is former dean Toni Massaro because “she was able to teach the legal

concepts and make them applicable to real life.”  Although Katey feels her view

of the legal system has not changed in result to law school, she now

understands the legal system better.

 

Katey is a local Tucsonan and loves the benefit of having authentic Mexican

food readily available that comes with living in the Old Pueblo.  Rigo’s on south

4th Avenue is definitely her favorite place to dine, yet recently Sur Real, with its

dancing and great food, has worked its way up her list.  Katey’s favorite hobbies

include jogging and hanging out with her three kids.  When asked about her

dream job, Katherine remarks her dream job would have to be: “Lawyer or hair

dresser, although I have no skills in the hair dressing arena so I hope law works

out for me.”  Based on her skills as a volunteer, we have a hunch that it will. 

 

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Past Outstanding Volunteer Student Awards

 
 

 

 

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