{"title":"Addressing Shortfalls in Traditional Legal Education: UT's Concentrations and Capstones and Waller Lansden's Schola2Juris Program","authors":"George W. Kuney, J. Watson","doi":"10.2139/SSRN.2286117","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Law school’s traditional educational model needs to be revamped. The traditional law firm’s summer associate model needs restructuring. Some might say they are both broken. Across the country, educators, and commentators are talking about legal education reforms and leading law firms are confronting how to improve the age-old mechanism for recruiting law students. In the recent past, the legal employment landscape provided no incentive for law firms to question their traditional recruiting practices. The traditional law-firm recruitment model — the summer-associate program — is often little more than a glorified summer camp for some of the most highly educated — and debt-ridden — law students of our time. This summer-long social event often fails to provide students with a true depiction of life inside the law firm. Instead, the experience introduces the summer associate to isolated but “glamorous” aspects of legal matters, rather than assigning the students to perform necessary, but perhaps mundane, billable hours. Even in firms whose clients continue to allow them to bill for work performed by summer associates, a seasoned associate is often required to rework the majority of the student’s work or reduce or delete time spent by the student from the final bill. The traditional summer-associate program historically emphasizes entertainment over providing the summer associate with a realistic experience of life inside a law firm. Law students and law schools are realizing that the apprentice stage of legal education should provide a more valuable, tangible experience. The students recently voiced their discontent in The American Lawyer’s 2012 Summer Associate Survey, which reveals the students’ desire to engage in legal work and to experience professional mentoring, while decreasing the number of over-the-top social events that are the norm. The problem of wasted summer work opportunities is compounded by another phenomenon, discussed by Dean Daniel Rodriguez of Northwestern Law School, who has openly questioned the value of the third year of law school. Rodriguez asserts that law schools must do more to provide substantive experiences and exposure to real life legal matters to prepare their students for legal careers. Some law schools are catching on, while others have long integrated skills-based courses in their curriculums.This article addresses the University of Tennessee’s Concentrations in Advocacy and Business and related programs, which seek to bring practice experience into law school, and Waller Lansden’s Schola2Juris program, which seeks to bring teaching about law and practice into its recruiting program. Both are coming at the same set of shortfalls of traditional legal education with substantially similar solutions, but from different ends of the legal job market.","PeriodicalId":188781,"journal":{"name":"Transactions: The Tennessee Journal of Business Law","volume":"9 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-06-27","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Transactions: The Tennessee Journal of Business Law","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.2139/SSRN.2286117","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Law school’s traditional educational model needs to be revamped. The traditional law firm’s summer associate model needs restructuring. Some might say they are both broken. Across the country, educators, and commentators are talking about legal education reforms and leading law firms are confronting how to improve the age-old mechanism for recruiting law students. In the recent past, the legal employment landscape provided no incentive for law firms to question their traditional recruiting practices. The traditional law-firm recruitment model — the summer-associate program — is often little more than a glorified summer camp for some of the most highly educated — and debt-ridden — law students of our time. This summer-long social event often fails to provide students with a true depiction of life inside the law firm. Instead, the experience introduces the summer associate to isolated but “glamorous” aspects of legal matters, rather than assigning the students to perform necessary, but perhaps mundane, billable hours. Even in firms whose clients continue to allow them to bill for work performed by summer associates, a seasoned associate is often required to rework the majority of the student’s work or reduce or delete time spent by the student from the final bill. The traditional summer-associate program historically emphasizes entertainment over providing the summer associate with a realistic experience of life inside a law firm. Law students and law schools are realizing that the apprentice stage of legal education should provide a more valuable, tangible experience. The students recently voiced their discontent in The American Lawyer’s 2012 Summer Associate Survey, which reveals the students’ desire to engage in legal work and to experience professional mentoring, while decreasing the number of over-the-top social events that are the norm. The problem of wasted summer work opportunities is compounded by another phenomenon, discussed by Dean Daniel Rodriguez of Northwestern Law School, who has openly questioned the value of the third year of law school. Rodriguez asserts that law schools must do more to provide substantive experiences and exposure to real life legal matters to prepare their students for legal careers. Some law schools are catching on, while others have long integrated skills-based courses in their curriculums.This article addresses the University of Tennessee’s Concentrations in Advocacy and Business and related programs, which seek to bring practice experience into law school, and Waller Lansden’s Schola2Juris program, which seeks to bring teaching about law and practice into its recruiting program. Both are coming at the same set of shortfalls of traditional legal education with substantially similar solutions, but from different ends of the legal job market.
法学院的传统教育模式需要改革。传统律师事务所的暑期助理模式需要重组。有些人可能会说他们都坏了。在全国范围内,教育工作者和评论家都在谈论法律教育改革,而主要的律师事务所正在面临如何改进古老的法律学生招聘机制的问题。在最近的过去,法律就业形势并没有激励律师事务所质疑其传统的招聘做法。传统的律师事务所招聘模式——暑期助理项目——通常只不过是我们这个时代一些受过高等教育、负债累累的法律学生的一个美化的夏令营。这个长达夏天的社交活动往往无法为学生提供律师事务所内部生活的真实描述。相反,这种经历让暑期助理接触到法律事务中孤立但“迷人”的方面,而不是让学生们完成必要的、但可能平凡的计费工作。即使在那些客户继续允许他们为暑期实习律师所完成的工作收费的公司里,经验丰富的律师也经常被要求重新完成学生的大部分工作,或者在最终账单中减少或删除学生花费的时间。传统的暑期助理项目历来强调娱乐,而不是为暑期助理提供律师事务所内部生活的真实体验。法学院学生和法学院都意识到,法律教育的学徒阶段应该提供更有价值、更切实的经验。学生们最近在《美国律师》2012年暑期助理调查中表达了他们的不满,该调查显示,学生们希望从事法律工作,并体验专业指导,同时减少了作为常态的过度社交活动的数量。西北大学法学院(Northwestern Law School)院长丹尼尔•罗德里格斯(Daniel Rodriguez)讨论过的另一种现象,使浪费暑期工作机会的问题更加复杂。罗德里格斯公开质疑法学院第三年的价值。罗德里格斯断言,法学院必须做更多的工作,提供实质性的经验和接触现实生活中的法律事务,为学生的法律职业做好准备。一些法学院正在迎头赶上,而另一些法学院早就将技能课程纳入了课程。这篇文章介绍了田纳西大学的倡导和商业集中以及相关项目,这些项目寻求将实践经验带入法学院,以及沃勒·兰斯登的Schola2Juris项目,该项目寻求将法律和实践的教学带入其招聘项目。两者都面临着传统法律教育的同样的不足,解决方案基本相似,但来自法律就业市场的不同一端。