Associate Professor of Law
Faculty Director, Center for Equity and Justice
PUBLICATIONS
SSRN Papers
Curriculum Vitae
Email: [email protected]
Phone: 717.541.3976
Professor Kellyn O. McGee is a sought-after expert on legal ethics, professionalism, and lawyer regulation, and has published articles on those subjects, as well as on the practices and techniques of mindfulness and psychological/emotional wellness.
Professor McGee earned her juris doctor from Howard University Law School and served on the Howard Law Journal as a special articles editor and also received a merit scholarship.
Prior to her arrival at Widener Law Commonwealth, she was the director of the Transition In Law Practice Program for the State Bar of Georgia. In that role, she managed the required mentoring and continuing legal education program for newly admitted lawyers. In a previous role, she was associate dean of students and associate professor at Savannah Law School, where she taught in the areas of legal ethics, civil procedure, and alternative dispute resolutions. Before entering academia, Professor McGee served as assistant general counsel for the State Bar of Georgia, litigating lawyer disciplinary cases and providing ethics advice to lawyers, law students, and paralegals.
Professor McGee served on the Atlanta Association’s CLE board of trustees, the board of directors for Georgia Court Appointed Special Advocates (life member), and on the American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Professionalism. She is a member of various bar and professional associations, including the Georgia Association of Black Women Attorneys, the Georgia Association for Women Lawyers, Gate City Bar Association, Georgia Hispanic Bar Association, and the Lawyers Club of Atlanta.
Outside of the classroom, she serves as a mediator and as a certified yoga teacher, and admits she is easily pulled to sandy beaches near blue water. In addition, she is a writer of fiction and nonfiction, with her work covering a variety of topics, including mortal turpitude in lawyer regulation, using pop culture as a teaching tool in law school courses, and Prince Rogers Nelson as a spiritual bandleader.
BBA, Howard University School of Business and Public Administration
JD, Howard University School of Law
Associate Professor, Savannah Law School
Associate Dean of Students, Savannah Law School
Director of Transition Into Law Practice Program, State Bar of Georgia
Assistant General Counsel, State Bar of Georgia
Grievance Counsel, State Bar of Georgia
Attorney Advisor, U.S. Small Business Administration, Disaster Assistance
Georgia
Supreme Court of Georgia
U.S. Supreme Court
American Bar Association
Atlanta Bar Association
American Bar Association’s Standing Committee on Professionalism
Georgia Association of Black Women Attorneys
Georgia Association for Women Lawyers
Pennsylvania Bar Association Legal Ethics and Professional Responsibility Committee