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The Case Against Law School

Should the standard three years of law school, followed by the bar exam, be the only path to a legal career?

Allow Anyone to Take the Bar

Updated July 21, 2011, 07:56 PM

George Leef, a graduate of Duke University Law School, is the director of research at the Pope Center for Higher Education Policy.

The legal profession has long sought to turn itself into a cartel. Among its anti-competitive tactics is mandating that prospective lawyers go through a needlessly long and expensive period of education. The truth is that very little that a lawyer needs to know is learned in law school classrooms and that which is essential, particularly legal research and writing, could easily be learned elsewhere.

Very little that a lawyer needs to know is learned in law school classrooms.

In the early 1900s, we had a free market in legal education. People could go to a law school, and the institutions varied considerably. Few schools tried to keep students enrolled for three years, since most students thought the benefits of additional years weren’t worth the costs. But the majority of lawyers did not go to law school at all. Instead, they learned their profession while working in law firms. Many became extraordinary lawyers and jurists.

It’s still true that lawyers learn almost everything on the job. Today, however, they must first go through three years of law school, taking a lot of courses they’ll immediately forget. That high, artificial barrier to entry exists only because the American Bar Association lobbied for state legislation making its model of legal education the only path into the profession.

Two consequences of this regulation are that we have more law schools and professors than we otherwise would, and that many poorer people can’t afford legal assistance because lawyers must generate high fees to cover the cost of their degrees.

States should deregulate legal education by allowing anyone to attempt the bar exam. It should no more matter how an individual learned the material for the bar than it matters to an orchestra how a prospective musician learned to play. Law schools now enjoy a captive market, and if they had to compete against other modes of legal education, costs would fall and efficiency would rise.

Topics: Education, Jobs, Law, students

1.
Alex Short
Cambridge, MA
July 22nd, 2011 4:49 am
I agree with this writer. If the bar exam is actually as hard as everyone says it is then the legal educators should have nothing to worry about -- nobody could pass it without years of study. As it is, most JD holders still seem to cram in the months (weeks?) before the bar rather than learn over the years they were in law school. The fact that the ABA doesn't want to let everyone sit for the bar is further evidence that the whole legal education biz is a house of cards.
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2.
Jennifer555
Progressive in Republican Land
July 22nd, 2011 6:05 am
The problem with Mr. Leef's theory is that it is "the poor" who would be paying for a young lawyer to do all of the basic research s/he would need to resolve the client's problem.
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3.
Jason
Grand Island, Nebraska
July 22nd, 2011 6:16 am
This is a good thought. At my law school, a class called "Elements of Law" was a required course during 1L. It taught the basic principles of being a lawyer. I felt perfectly competent to be an attorney after taking Elements and Legal Writing.
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4.
scientella
Northern California
July 22nd, 2011 7:03 am
If that is what would break the "cartel" you so accurately describe I would be ALL for it. Dont know if it would. But its worth a try.!
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5.
John
Miami, FL
July 22nd, 2011 7:35 am
I'm not the biggest fan of deregulating private businesses, but this a clear, concise argument. I posted it on Facebook!
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6.
Alfredo De La Fe
New York, NY
July 22nd, 2011 8:26 am
I agree wholeheartedly. If an individual is able to pass the bar why should they be forced to pay for and sit in classes which they do not need and which every attorney I have ever spoken to admits has no value in the real world?
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7.
miller
wilmington nc
July 22nd, 2011 12:11 pm
Yes yes yes, George Leef. And add in 3 basic courses in constitutional law, contract law, and criminal law for high school students. Every citizen should have access to this information to prepare us to function in society.
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8.
Mike
Ithaca
July 22nd, 2011 12:25 pm
My heart really wants to go out to this argument. It really does. The truth is that the bar isn't really all that hard, though. I helped a close friend study for it and she scored in the 99th percentile; after a few weeks I was sure I could answer all the questions, too. (In point of fact, I was correcting her on some of the practice questions myself.)

The good thing about the bar is that it keeps a lot of incompetent individuals from practicing law. That's a social good.

But allowing any old bum off the street to take and pass it is risky, too.

I flatter myself in thinking I'm a smart person, but I know I'm certainly not the smartest (and not as smart as my friend). And I don't really know anything about the law. There are a lot of dolts out there, too, who will learn to game the bar exam as they do the SAT, GRE, and so on. They'll become lawyers under this plan.

Then when you and I suddenly need a lawyer, we won't know the difference between someone like me or the idiot version of me, who bought a test prep book or took a six-week Kaplan class and aced the exam through sheer force of memorization, and a bona fide law school graduate who struggled through three years of tough tests and competition and still emerged intact.

I'd want the latter to represent me. But I'm sure there'd be a zillion more of the former types out there. We'd work for less. And how would I know the difference? How could I pay for the difference?
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9.
Donna
St. Petersburg, FL
July 22nd, 2011 12:40 pm
After graduating from law school, I took a bar review course to prepare for the bar exam. The lecturers in this review course were far superior to the professors in law school and covered everything in 6 weeks to allow us to pass the bar. Why did we need to go to an expensive law school and spend all that money? if you can pass the bar exam, you should be able to practice law. Another consideration is, if you graduate from an accredited law school, why should you have to take the bar exam
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10.
Joe Jensen
Chicago
July 22nd, 2011 12:54 pm
Agreed 100000%, Law Schools like MBA programs are in the business of making money first and educating last. Lots of very intelligent people get left out of all kinds of professions because of the demand for a degree to get into the interview stage. Was the success of America born on the backs of the over educated or the backs of hard working people who never gave up?
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11.
Laura
Cleveland, OH
July 22nd, 2011 1:11 pm
I couldn't agree with you more. My husband and I have successfully defended ourselves pro se on a number of occasions and our writings have given chills to opposing lawyers.
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12.
James
New York, NY
July 22nd, 2011 1:27 pm
I agree with the statement: "Let anyone take the bar"
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