Mike Spivey (law school administration)
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Mike Spivey | |
|---|---|
| Born | 1972 (age 53–54) |
| Alma mater | Vanderbilt University (B.A.) University of Alabama (M.B.A.) |
| Known for | Higher Education Leadership |
Mike Spivey is an author,[1] motivational speaker,[2] podcaster,[3] and the founder of The Spivey Consulting Group,[4] and he has been featured in national media outlets including The New York Times,[5] Bloomberg Law,[6] The Washington Post,[7] Reuters,[8] The Economist,[9] Fortune (magazine),[10] Investopedia,[11] Newsweek,[12] USA Today,[13] Business Insider,[14] Inside Higher Ed,[15] the ABA Journal,[16][17] The Chronicle of Higher Education,[18] U.S. News & World Report,[19] CNN/Fortune,[20] Above the Law,[21][22] and Law.com.[23]
He is a former senior-level administrator at Vanderbilt, Washington University in St. Louis, and the University of Colorado law schools. He was among the first higher education experts to write publicly about the possibility of university campuses remaining closed through fall 2020 in response to the COVID-19 pandemic[24] and has been featured in the media in respect to how higher education should respond to pandemic-related concerns.[25] He is a co-author of The PowerScore/Spivey Consulting Law School Admissions Bible,[1] and his next book, We're All A Bit Messy,[26] is scheduled to be published in 2026.[27]
He has published hundreds of articles on motivation, goal-setting, how to improve law schools, law school admissions, and legal employment[28] and has been featured as a speaker at colleges and universities, including presenting with Civil Rights Leader Representative John Lewis and Wikipedia co-founder Jimmy Wales at the University of Alabama.[29][2] He hosts a podcast, "Status Check with Spivey,"[3] in which he speaks about legal education and admissions. His guests have included prominent figures like General David Petraeus, former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) and Four-Star General,[30] and Elizabeth Vargas, the television news anchor and journalist at NewsNation;[31] several prominent lawyers, legal academics, and law school deans, including William Treanor,[32] Dayna Bowen Matthew,[33] Nita A. Farahany,[34] Megan Carpenter,[35] and two Global Chairs from Gibson Dunn;[36][37] as well as numerous psychologists, psychiatrists, neuroscientists and researchers in the mental health field, including Judson A. Brewer,[38] Guy Winch,[39] Gabor Maté,[40] Anna Lembke,[41] and Kristin Neff.[42]
Spivey has served on the board of directors for two legal education entities — a non-profit[43] and a tech startup — and is a former advisory board member for LexisNexis.[44] Outside of his professional career, he formerly competed as a track athlete.[45] He is from New Canaan, Connecticut, and resides in Boulder, Colorado.