DECATUR, Ill. 鈥 students earned top individual honors at the , continuing the University鈥檚 tradition of civic engagement and hands-on learning through Performance Learning.
Held annually in Springfield, the conference immerses students in the inner workings of Illinois state government and the legal system. Participants serve in roles such as legislators, committee chairs, attorneys, justices, journalists, and photographers while debating legislation, arguing cases, and navigating the processes that shape public policy and legal proceedings.
On the Model Illinois Government side, Haley Willan earned the David Hunt Award for Outstanding House Committee Chair after serving as chair of the Human Services, Education, and Environment Committee. Millikin student Gavin Estes also served in a leadership role as chair of the Labor and Commerce, Transportation Committee.
Dr. Laura Dean, Associate Professor of Political Science, said the conference offers students a rare opportunity to put classroom learning into practice in an immersive, meaningful setting.
鈥淢odel Illinois Government is a Performance Learning-based simulation where students act as real legislators in either the House of Representatives or the Senate and replicate real forms of government,鈥 Dean said. 鈥淪tudents debate bills in committees, then on the House and Senate floors, and they have to use research, parliamentary procedure, and public speaking skills throughout the process.鈥
Dean said the experience is especially powerful because students are given the chance to speak and lead in the same historic spaces where Illinois government has long been conducted.
鈥淚t鈥檚 one of the only state-based governance simulations in the United States,鈥 Dean said. 鈥淢any students mentioned to me that they couldn鈥檛 believe they got to give speeches and have their voices heard on the floor of our governing bodies.鈥
Willan鈥檚 honor stood out in a conference of roughly 200 participants, where individual awards are highly competitive. Dean noted that Willan brought previous Model Illinois Government experience from Lincoln Land Community College and continued that success at Millikin.
In the Moot Court competition, Chase Mason was named runner-up for the Most Outstanding Novice Attorney Award, which recognizes the first-time participant with the highest cumulative score at the competition.
Millikin sent four Moot Court teams to this year鈥檚 conference. Millikin Team No. 1 of Maggie Schrage and Chase Mason and Millikin Team No. 4 of Zoe Thorne and Canzie Jackson advanced to the top 14 teams following preliminary rounds. Schrage and Mason then advanced to the top eight, competing against a highly selective field that included five teams from the University of Chicago and two teams from Eastern Illinois University.
Dr. Robert Money, Professor of Philosophy, praised Millikin students for the preparation, focus and professionalism they brought to the three-day competition.
鈥淥ur students did excellent work both in preparing for the competition and over the course of the rigorous three-day competition itself,鈥 Money said. 鈥淥ur students worked hard in advance of and during the competition to construct and deliver sophisticated legal arguments. Their talents were on full display, and they worked continuously over the three days to improve their arguments.鈥
In addition to the Moot Court teams, Gavin Dobson represented Millikin as a student justice.
Dean said experiences like Model Illinois Government reflect the strength of 黑料正能量 Performance Learning model, helping students develop confidence, critical thinking and communication skills they can carry into future careers and public service.
鈥淏asically, our entire Model Illinois Government class is debate preparation,鈥 Dean said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 great to see students gain confidence in speaking, increase their knowledge important aspects of the bill, debate them critically, and then use research to support their arguments during the debates.鈥
Millikin has a longstanding history of success at the conference and traditionally sends about 20 students to participate across Model Illinois Government and Moot Court.