Project Overview • Ibrat Mock Trials

Courtroom skills — made for students.

Mock Trials are educational simulations of courtroom proceedings where you act as attorneys, witnesses, jurors, and judges. Learn law, justice, and debate through practice — with philosophy warm-ups to sharpen ethics and reasoning.

See how it works

What is a Mock Trial?

A hands-on way to learn law, justice, and debate.

In 5 words?

Educational courtroom simulations for students. You’ll argue real or fictional cases, question witnesses, and persuade jurors — while building life skills like speaking, teamwork, problem-solving, and leadership.

We also add short warm-up dilemmas in philosophy — because ethics, logic, and rhetoric are the backbone of good legal reasoning.

Not an exam — a simulation

Many people confuse mock trials with SAT/IELTS “mocks”. They’re different. Here, you’re inside a courtroom story, not filling in answer sheets.

  • Act it out: take roles like attorney, witness, juror, judge.
  • Practice the process: openings → examinations → closings → verdict.
  • Get feedback: judges/moderators help you refine arguments & delivery.

How it works

From case packet to verdict — student-friendly.

Click a step to explore. Progress fills as you go.

Pick your role

Who will you be in court?

Tap a card to flip for responsibilities and tips.

Attorney

Prosecutor / Defense

Craft a theory, examine witnesses, and deliver persuasive openings/closings.

Tap to flip →

Key moves

Analyze the case, work with your witnesses to strategize a plan and execute powerful statements in the courtroom.

← Tap to flip back
Witness

Bring the facts to life

Act out your character, stay within your statement, and handle cross with calm.

Tap to flip →

Key moves

  • Memorize your statement’s facts, not a script.
  • Answer only what’s asked.
  • Stay in character under pressure.
← Tap to flip back
Jury

Listen. Weigh. Decide.

Score teams on clarity, persuasion, and mastery — not the case outcome.

Tap to flip →

Key moves

  • Separate facts from assumptions.
  • Track key themes & inconsistencies.
  • Decide by the standard given.
← Tap to flip back
Judge

Keep order & coach

Ensure rules are followed and offer constructive feedback as a coordinator.

Tap to flip →

Key moves

  • Guide, don’t dominate.
  • Be fair & consistent.
  • Model courtroom professionalism.
← Tap to flip back

What’s inside a case

Peek into the case packet

Open sections on the left — preview appears on the right.

Background & facts

A short narrative setting, parties involved, and the dispute at stake.

Applicable rules

Key laws or competition rules relevant to the case (e.g., hearsay, relevance).

Witness statements

Each witness has a signed statement — your truth boundary during testimony.

Exhibits & evidence

Photos, reports, maps, chats, receipts — props you can admit and argue from.

Exhibit A — “Chat Transcript”

Hover to zoom • Click to annotate

Our story

Uzbekistan’s First Mock Trials Movement

Founded by Oybek, Asadbek, and Khabibulloh to close the gap in legal opportunities for youth.

We created Ibrat Mock Trials to make courtroom learning accessible, practical, and exciting. Our goal is to create new opportunities for young law enthusiasts in Uzbekistan. Each event is balanced so either side can win — the focus is on persuasion, clarity, and courtroom skills. Judges coordinate fairly (often school Ambassadors or Regional Managers) and provide actionable feedback to help you grow.

Ready to step into court?

Choose a role, practice your case, and experience the energy of a live trial.

Explore stages Pick a role

Demo placeholder — embed your 30s promo video here (YouTube/Vimeo or MP4).

Exhibit A — Chat Transcript Annotation demo
(Click & drag to annotate)