<p>You’d have to find an attorney willing to take your case, and even if you could, it will cost you $$ to file suit and to pay the attorney’s hourly rate. No attorney is going to take what sounds like a frivolous law suit on contingency. What is the grounds of your suit? The fact that you didn’t read the school’s policy? PLease tell me you aren’t trying to claim disctimination or something. Surely you were given some sort of warning/academic probation befire being dismissed outright. Waste of time, in my mind. Either try to meet with the administation and work something out or take this as a life’s lesson.</p>
<p>Even if you had any chance of this case not being summarily dismissed, you’d be shooting yourself in the foot- sure, you MIGHT get back into the school and not fail out again, but then what employer would ever hire you knowing you’re that trigger happy with lawsuits? I wouldn’t hire you- what if you turned out to be incompetent, I fired you, and you then sued?</p>
<p>You can sue anyone for anything. Doesn’t mean you’re going to win.</p>
<p>The facts here indicate that you most likely will not win. But if you insist on ignoring me and suing, consult a lawyer and don’t post anymore details here.</p>
<p>If you do sue, you might as well post the details here. If you’re going to have your case dismissed, at least give some of the future law students out there a real-life case study in ethical practice.</p>
<p>Why don’t you see if you can retake the course that led to the poor academic standards? Have you looked into that at all?</p>
<p>What good would suing the school do?</p>
<p>Would it make you successful in the academic program?</p>
<p>You participated in the program for two semesters and were not successful in either semester. What has changed that would make you successful in the future? Did you suddenly sprout a better brain? Have you remediated your academic deficiencies? If you returned to school, would you be in any better position for successfully meeting the academic requirements for a degree?</p>
<p>You had a bad first semester and apparently didn’t learn anything from your poor performance–which resulted in a second semester of poor performance. </p>
<p>Apparently you weren’t even motivated enough to meet with your professors, academic counselors, or deans to get on track. You weren’t even motivated enough to check out the requirements of your program for yourself!</p>
<p>I can just imagine your cross examination in court now:</p>
<p>Did you enroll at X?</p>
<p>Does X have published criteria for academic progress?</p>
<p>Did your performance meet the published criteria?</p>
<p>Did X in any way impede your ability to perform academically in a way necessary to meet the published criteria? Did they treat you differently than any other student in the program?</p>
<p>And so why is X responsible for you failing out of the academic program?</p>