US Law Schools Change to a Down Market
posted by lawfueleditors
, on Jul 10
Law schools in the US are changing their law school offerings in the new, down market.
Law jobs are way down. So how are the law schools reacting - by changing their curricula to adapt to the changed conditions, mainly by giving greater emphasis to practical courses like clinics and simulations. The National Law Journal reports.
The dismal job market for newly minted lawyers has influenced how most law school administrators approach their course offerings, with 76 percent of the institutions surveyed reporting that they've modified their curricula to adapt, according to the American Bar Association's first empirical survey of law school curricula in a decade.So-called practical skills courses -- clinics, simulations and externships -- are on the rise.
Media scrutiny of law school curricula has fueled some of the changes, according to the chair of the ABA committee that produced the report.The survey uses the findings of a previous ABA study of curricula that covered the years 1992 to 2002 as a baseline for comparison.
"The survey responses reveal a renewed commitment by law schools to review and revise their curricula to produce practice-ready professionals," said Hulett "Bucky" Askew, the ABA's consultant on legal education. "The report illuminates the extent to which faculties and administrators have responded to the evolving needs of their students and to changes in the legal services industry."
Source: Lawfuel.com

