Skip to main content
Home
Contact Office of Advancement Search
Home
  • Stories

    Your Gifts Transform Lives

    The University serves Virginia, the nation, and the world by preparing responsible citizen-leaders; advancing, preserving, and disseminating knowledge; and providing world-class patient care.

    Give Now

    • Categories
      • View All
      • Arts
      • Athletics
      • Environment
      • Faculty
      • Health
      • Research
      • Students
      • Technology
    • Schools
      • Architecture
      • Arts & Sciences
      • Batten
      • Darden
      • Data Science
      • Education
      • Engineering
      • Law
      • McIntire
      • Medicine
      • Nursing
      • Wise
  • Why Give

    Why Give to UVA?

    All gifts of any kind help secure the University’s place as a premier institution of learning and make it possible for our students, faculty, and researchers to shape a brighter future.

    Give Now

    • Why Give
      • Overview
      • Parents Program
        • Parents Program Scholarships
        • Rainy Day Fund
      • Reunion Giving
    • Leaders in Philanthropy
      • Lawn Society
      • Cornerstone Society
      • Rotunda Society
      • 1819 Society
    • Preserving History
      • Overview
      • Join Jefferson's Circle
  • Where to Give

    Where to Give

    You can give to all 12 schools across Grounds. The possibilities are endless for supporting our students, faculty, and programs. Together, we will find the way forward.

    Learn More

    • Featured Priorities
      • UVA Global
      • University Library
      • School of Data Science
      • Contemplative Sciences Center
      • The Virginia Fund
    • Students
      • Overview
      • Bicentennial Scholars Fund
      • Blue Ridge Scholars
      • Cavalier Fund
      • University Achievement Awards
    • Academic & Faculty Excellence
      • Overview
      • Bicentennial Professors Fund
      • Center for Teaching Excellence
      • Advising
      • USOAR
  • Ways to Give

    Plan Your Gift

    You can join the growing number of alumni and friends who invest now in the University’s future by including UVA as a beneficiary of their wills, charitable trusts, and retirement plans. Gifts like these can offer you and your family significant tax benefits as well as greater financial flexibility in meeting your personal and philanthropic goals.

    Give Now

    • Ways to Give
      • Overview
      • Choose Your Method
      • Create an Endowment
      • Plan Your Gift
    • Plans from An Estate
      • Retirement Plans
      • Wills and Living Trusts
    • Other Planned Giving
      • Life Insurance
      • Real Estate
      • Qualified Charitable Distributions
      • Stocks and Bonds
    • Plans with an Income
      • Charitable Gift Annuities
      • Charitable Remainder Trusts
  • Campaign

    Honor the Future

    Through Honor the Future, the Campaign for the University of Virginia, we are building on our strong foundations to support the president’s vision: to become the best public university by 2030 and one of the very best in the world.

    Give Now

    • Campaign Pillars
      • Education
      • Democracy
      • Research
    • Video Series
      • Campaign Pillars
      • Gratitude in Motion
      • This Is How We Honor the Future
      • What Drives Us
    • Campaign Executive Committee
    • The 2030 Plan
  • Give Now
  • Visit Our Honor the Future Campaign Site
  • Stories
  • Why Give
    • For the Future
    • It's Your Reunion Year
    • Be a Leader
  • Where to Give
    • Schools & Programs
    • Students
    • Academic & Faculty Excellence
    • Jeffersonian Grounds
    • The Virginia Fund
    • Parents Fund
  • Ways To Give
    • Choose Your Method
    • Create an Endowment
    • Plan Your Gift
  • Campaign
  • Give Now

Michael Gilbert’s Reflective Statement for the All-University Teaching Award Nomination

Image
School of Law

Michael Gilbert is one of three Karsh Bicentennial Professors.
Read more about their story here >

Michael Gilbert’s Reflective Statement for the All-University Teaching Award Nomination

Michael Gilbert

I am humbled by this nomination for an All-University Teaching Award. But I also feel a little sheepish. I do not have a complete philosophy of teaching, nor a teaching role model whom I can single out. During my years on both sides of the podium, I have not developed a pedagogy. I have just paid attention to what worked, and I have tucked it away. Instead of a grand theory of teaching, I have enthusiasm and a checklist.

    

First, I try to be kind. As a student, I saw the "Paper Chase" model of law teaching—stern, formal, aloof—up close, and it rarely worked. I learned much more from professors with whom I felt comfortable. So, I strive to be open and collegial, to welcome every student into the fold, and to make myself approachable, both in class and outside of it. I teach a big course on charged topics (voting rights and campaign finance). When diverse students in the room have a peaceful discussion, it feels like a victory.

Image
Students in the School of Law Library

I learned much more from professors with whom I felt comfortable. So, I strive to be open and collegial, to welcome every student into the fold, and to make myself approachable, both in class and outside of it.

- Michael Gilbert

Second, I strive to be respectful. I learn every student’s name, I answer every one of their questions (often in the hallway), and I respond to every email. I always prepare for class, both by refreshing my memory of the material and reconsidering the clearest way to present it. The presentation is especially important to me. As a law student, I often had a nagging feeling that some topics were not, in fact, all that complicated, they were just poorly explained. It turns out I was right. I aim to cut through the noise and present clearly, all without dumbing down. I do not always succeed, but I try.

Third, I am rigorous. Yes, I want the students to be comfortable and relaxed. But I also want to sharpen their legal minds into razors. I ask challenging questions. If something seems obvious, I show them why it’s not. The Supreme Court has repeatedly stated that it cannot rule on partisan gerrymandering because the issue is too complex. Most students find this absurd, but I think the Court might be right. It really is complex, and there is no magic bullet. I work to show them why.    

Here’s one last commitment:  I strive to be interesting. Law can seem so dry. But if you scratch a little, profound questions always lurk. The case of the poor farmer and his lawn mower isn’t about Wisconsin’s statute on debt—it’s about poverty, markets, and when words in law change meaning over time. The case about the boater who trespassed in a storm isn’t about property—it’s about when people can get along themselves, and when the state must intervene. And the case about voter ID laws isn’t just about homelessness and drivers’ licenses (though that’s all important). It’s about every voting law, from Alabama to Afghanistan, that aims to secure elections but paradoxically, might skew their results. I always appreciated and remembered best the material that connected to the wider world. I try to make those connections in my classroom.  

At a recent graduation, a student who had taken my law and economics course four semesters prior, and whom I had hardly spoken to since, came up to me. He told me that he thought about my class—in other classes, at home, in the grocery store—almost every day. That felt like a victory.

Join Envision

Sign up for our ENVISION newsletter to hear how your gifts have helped shape the future of the University of Virginia.

Subscribe

Contact

Careers

Office of Advancement

University of Virginia

GIVE NOW

© 2023 BY THE RECTOR AND VISITORS OF THE UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA
  • Non-discrimination Notice
  • Privacy Policy