I suppose when we’re quoted in The Wall Street Journal it’s worth writing about.
So it was with a combination of pleasure and surprise that I opened this morning’s browser tabs to find this piece talking about law schools beginning to introduce more “practical” elements into their curricula, with an associated article (quoted below) talking about those changes:
Indiana University Maurer School of Law started teaching project management this year and also offers a course on so-called emotional intelligence. The class has no textbook and instead uses personality assessments and peer reviews to develop students’ interpersonal skills.
New York Law School hired 15 new faculty members over the past two years, many directly from the ranks of working lawyers, to teach skills in negotiation, counseling and fact investigation. The school says it normally hires one or two new faculty a year, and usually those focused on legal research.
And Washington and Lee University School of Law completely rebuilt its third-year curriculum in 2009, swapping out lectures and Socratic-style seminars for case-based simulations run by practicing lawyers.
A few elite players also are making adjustments. Harvard Law School last year launched a problem-solving class for first-year students, and Stanford Law School is considering making a full-time clinical course–which entails several 40-hour plus weeks of actual case work–a graduation requirement.
“Law firms are saying, ‘You’re sending us people who are not in a position to do anything useful for clients.’ This is a first effort to try and fix that,” says Larry Kramer, the law dean at Stanford.
The article also notes the obligatory, that this comes among a “prolonged downturn” in employment prospects for law students. Here’s the “nine months out” employment rate chart for the past decade:
The difference, that is, between what the client would be within the four corners of legality to do and what the client really ought to think about doing.
It’s only by trying something new that we as a profession and an industry have any prayer of improving the way we actually do things. Some experiments may fail, but others will work.
And my quote, you’re wondering?
Others say schools that have overhauled programs need to do a better job of promoting the changes to employers in order to see an impact. Until then, law school prestige will remain a big factor, says Bruce MacEwen, a law firm consultant and [writer] who tracks the legal industry.
“Firms are very obsessed with prestige,” he says. “That’s just a fact of life.”