|
Categories
|
|
|
|
|
Law School Accreditation
By
David G. Hallstrom
|
|
The following article was
written for and originally published by Resources For
Attorneys.com (http://www.resourcesforattorneys.com/).
Accreditaiton and what it means to you. According to the
Merriam-Webster dictionary the definition of accreditation
is "to recognize (an educational institution) as
maintaining standards that qualify the graduates for
admission to higher or more specialized institutions or
for professional practice." Law schools generally
fall into three catagories of accreditation, American Bar
Association (ABA) accredited, state accredited or
unaccredited.
ABA accreditation - According to the American Bar
Association, "Law schools approved by the American
Bar Association (ABA) provide a legal education which
meets a minimum set of standards as promulgated by the
ABA. Every jurisdiction in the United States has
determined that graduates of ABA-approved law schools are
able to sit for the bar in their respective jurisdictions.
The role that the ABA plays as the national accrediting
body has enabled accreditation to become unified and
national in scope rather than fragmented, with the
potential for inconsistency, among the 50 states, the
District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and
other territories. The Council of the ABA Section of Legal
Education and Admissions to the Bar is the United States
Department of Education recognized accrediting agency for
programs that lead to the first professional degree in
law. The law school approval process established by the
Council is designed to provide a careful and comprehensive
evaluation of a law school and its compliance with the
Standards for Approval of Law Schools."
State accreditation - Most states have their own
accreditation process and in most cases give accreditation
status to ABA accredited schools. However, there are many
law schools that for one reason or another do not meet all
of the ABA accredition requirements. Some of these
schools, however, do meet the states requirements. Note:
State requirements can vary by state. If a school meets
state requirements it can apply to that state for state
accreditation.
Unaccredited - According to the California Bar Association
"An unaccredited law school is one operating as a law
school in the State of California that is neither
accredited nor approved by the Committee, but must be
registered with the Committee and comply with the
requirements contained in Rules XIX and XX of the
Admission Rules, applicable provisions of the California
Rules of Court and relevant sections of the California
Business and Professions Code. A law school operating
wholly outside of California is unaccredited unless it has
applied for and received accreditation from the Committee
or is provisionally or fully approved by the American Bar
Association." Rules in many other states are the
same.
Most states require that you meet certain requirements
prior to being eligible to take their bar examination. The
California Bar states "To be eligible to take the
California Bar Examination, one must have completed at
least two years of college before beginning the study of
law or must have passed certain specified College Level
Equivalency Program examinations before beginning law
study and must have graduated from a law school approved
by the American Bar Association or accredited by the
Committee of Bar Examiners of The State Bar of California
or have completed four years of law study at an
unaccredited or correspondence law school registered with
the Committee or studied law in a law office or judge's
chambers in accordance with the Rules Regulating Admission
to Practice Law in California." Most states have
similar requirements.
The foregoing suggests that many states will not allow,
non ABA accredited out of state law school graduates to
take their bar examination, unless they attended school in
that state or a school that is certified by that state.
Therefore students graduating from non ABA accredited law
schools may not be allowed to practice in any state other
than the state they attended school. Note: Some states
have reciprocal agreements with other states allowing
attorneys registered in one state to become a member of
the bar in another state without taking a bar examination
in the new state.
Notwithstanding the foregoing, there are many fine law
schools in this country that are not ABA accredited.
Additionally, many ABA accredited schools do not offer
night time or part time classes. Finally, there are many
more applicants that spaces available in ABA accredited
schools, forcing many good students to attend other
schools. Therefore, accreditation should not be your only
criteria in choosing a law school or in deceiding whether
or not to hire a particular law school graduate.
|
About
The Author
Permission
is given to reprint this article providing
credit is given to the author, David G.
Hallstrom, and a link is listed to
Resources For Attorneys the owner of this
article (http://www.resourcesforattorneys.com/).
Anyone or any company reprinting this
article without giving proper credit and
the correct link, is doing so without
permission and will be subject to legal
action. |
|
|
|
<< Back to the Article Index
©
Copyright 2004, ArticleJunction.com
|
|
|