Law Professor Receives National Legal Education Award

Kelly Curtis was recognized by the American Association of Law Schools for her exceptional contributions to student support and academic programming.
Jan. 23, 2026

Kelly Curtis, associate dean of students and teaching professor in the College of Law, was recently recognized for her exceptional contributions to legal education with the American Association of Law Schools (AALS) Section on Academic Support Impact Award.

Curtis received the AALS Impact Award at the association’s recent annual meeting, where she also presented her current work in progress, “The Invisible Crisis: How Generative AI Transforms Risk Detection in Legal Education” during the “Fostering Impact and Resilience: Institutional Academic Support for Law Students and ASP Faculty” session. Her work demonstrates her leadership in shaping best practices across legal education.

The AALS Impact Award recognizes legal educators who are “inspiring students and peers in the academic support profession today and catapulting us forward to a stronger tomorrow.” Recipients must demonstrate significant impact through student support and mentoring, promoting diversity and expanding access to the legal profession or developing innovative ideas and practices.

Under Curtis’s leadership, Syracuse Law has built comprehensive support systems that guide students from admissions through the bar exam. She developed and now leads two critical offices: the Office of Student Experience (OSE), which fosters an engaging and inclusive environment for the entire law school community and oversees more than 30 student organizations; and the Office of Academic and Bar Support (OABS), which provides strategic academic guidance and programming tailored to each student’s success.

“Professor Curtis is dedicated to the growth and success of our students,” Dean Terence Lau L’98 says. “Her professional, personal approach to guiding our students through their legal education sets them up for success in their careers and as members of the communities they serve.”

In addition to her administrative leadership, Curtis maintains an active teaching portfolio, instructing courses in professional responsibility, feminist jurisprudence and law and sexuality—work that earned her the Meredith Teaching Recognition Award for her sustained commitment to excellence in the classroom.

“I am honored to receive these awards,” Curtis says. “Everyone at Syracuse Law places our students’ success at the forefront of everything we do, and I’m grateful to be part of a community so deeply committed to providing an exceptional student experience.”