Sessions Information

  • April 30, 2023
    9:00 am - 10:15 am
    Session Type: Works-in-Progress
    Session Capacity: N/A
    Hotel: N/A
    Room: Union Square 1&2
    Floor: 4th Floor

    Group #6: Law Schools and Legal Education

    Less is More: Legal Education Rebooted

    Mary Helen McNeal, Syracuse University College of Law

    For the last fifty years, there have been periodic calls for reform of legal education. Both the McCrate and Carnegie Reports propelled law schools to re-examine their curricula, and some made dramatic changes. Experiential learning has expanded, with increasingly specialized in-house clinics to externships, paid and unpaid, in both the public and private sectors. Doctrinal classes increasingly include experiential components, responding to demands to better prepare students for practice. ABA standards have simultaneously evolved to require a finite number of experiential learning credits, and most recently, a focus on professional identity formation.

    Amidst these changes, the cost of legal education has continued to rise. Low-and moderate-income people continue to struggle to secure access to legal assistance. Technology is changing the practice and doing some of what people used to do. Clients are reluctant to pay exorbitant fees and outsourcing is common.

    And yet, law school remains largely the same. This essay proposes that law school be reduced to two years and the adoption of a formal tutelage program. Following their second year, students would work with experienced practitioners. Law school faculty would facilitate the learning process by training practitioners with supervision and meeting with “students” periodically to assist them in learning from their experiences. While not a new suggestion, this essay will explore why a confluence of factors, including the costs of legal education, the growth in experiential learning, the changing economics of practice, and the role of technology, make this an opportune time to finally make this radical shift.

    Analyzing Inclusive Language Practices in Clinical Advocacy

    Jennifer Safstrom, Vanderbilt School of Law

    This project builds upon prior scholarship setting forth key considerations for inclusive language decision-making in a multi-factor framework—accuracy, precision, relevance, audience, and respect. Applying these principles, this analysis will explore the terms used by clinics in practice and the potential implications of those choices on student learning, case outcomes, as well as client, partner, and community relationships. This piece will explore some current trends and best practices when adopting these principles in the context of specific groups, and will connect these principles to broader academic and practice issues. Upon identifying these variations and trends, this project will further assess how these language choices are reconciled with the general practice patterns, as well as the clinic’s advocacy goals, clients, and intended audience.



Session Speakers
Syracuse University College of Law
Works-in-Progress Presenter

Vanderbilt University Law School
Works-in-Progress Presenter

Session Fees

Fees information is not available at this time.