Education
There is no single path that will prepare you for a legal education. Students who are successful in law school, and who become accomplished professionals, come from many walks of life and educational backgrounds. Some law students enter law school directly from their undergraduate studies without having had any post-baccalaureate work experience. Others begin their legal education significantly later in life, and they bring to their law school education the insights and perspectives gained from those life experiences. Legal education welcomes and values diversity and you will benefit from the exchange of ideas and different points of view that your colleagues will bring to the classroom.
Undergraduate
Education
The American Bar Association does
not recommend any undergraduate majors or group of courses
to prepare for a legal education. Students are admitted
to law school from almost every academic discipline. You
may choose to major in subjects that are considered to
be
traditional preparation for law school, such as history,
English, philosophy, political science, economics or business.
Or you may focus your undergraduate studies in areas as
diverse as art, music, science and mathematics, computer
science, engineering, nursing, or education. Whatever major
you select, you are encouraged to pursue an area of study
that interests and challenges you, while taking advantage
of opportunities to develop your research and writing skills.
Taking a broad range of difficult courses from demanding
instructors is excellent preparation for legal education.
A sound legal education
will build upon and further refine the skills, values, and
knowledge that you already possess. The student who comes
to law school lacking a broad range of basic skills and
knowledge will face a difficult challenge.
Pre-Law
Advisor
Undergraduate institutions often assign
a person to act as an advisor to current and former students
who are interested in pursuing a legal education. That individual
can help you with researching and identifying law schools
to which you may want to apply. If you are still attending
undergraduate school, your prelaw advisor can be helpful
in selecting courses that can help you achieve your goal.
Core Skills and Values:
• Analytic/Problem
Solving Skills
• Critical Reading
• Writing Skills
• Oral Communication / Listening
Abilities
• General Research Skills
• Task Organization / Management
Skills
• Public Service and Promotion
of Justice
There are important
skills, values, and significant bodies of knowledge that
you can acquire prior to law school that will provide a
sound foundation for a legal education. These include analytic
and problem solving skills , critical reading abilities,
writing skills, oral communication and listening abilities,
general research skills, task organization and management
skills, and the values of serving faithfully the interests
of others while also promoting justice. If you wish to prepare
adequately for a legal education, and for a career in law
or for other professional service that involves the use
of lawyering skills, you should seek educational, extracurricular,
and life experiences that will assist you in developing
those attributes. Some brief comments about each of the
listed skills and values follow.
Analytic
/ Problem Solving Skills
You should seek courses and other
experiences that will engage you in critical thinking about
important issues, challenge your beliefs and improve your
tolerance for uncertainty. Your legal education will demand
that you structure and evaluate arguments for and against
propositions that are susceptible to reasoned debate. Good
legal education will teach you to "think like a lawyer",
but the analytic and problem solving skills required of
lawyers are not fundamentally different from those employed
by other professionals. Your law school experience will
develop and refine those crucial skills, but you must enter
law school with a reasonably well developed set of analytic
and problem solving abilities.
Critical Reading
Abilities
Preparation for legal education should
include substantial experience at close reading and critical
analysis of complex textual material, for much of what you
will do as a law student and lawyer involves careful reading
and comprehension of judicial opinions, statues, documents,
and other written materials. As with the other skills discussed
in this statement, you can develop your critical reading
ability in a wide range of experiences, including the close
reading of complex material in literature, political or
economic theory, philosophy, or history. The particular
nature of the materials examined is not crucial; what is
important is that law school should not be the first time
that you are rigorously engaged in the enterprise of carefully
reading and understanding, and critically analyzing, complex
written material of substantial length.
Writing Skills
As you seek to prepare for a legal
education, you should develop a high degree of skill at
written communication. Language is the most important tool
of a lawyer, and lawyers must learn to express themselves
clearly and concisely.
Legal education will provide you with good training in writing, and particularly in the specific techniques and forms of written expression that are common in the law. Fundamental writing skills, however, must be acquired and refined before you enter law school. You should seek as many experiences as possible that will require rigorous and analytical writing, including preparing original pieces of substantial length and revising written work in response to constructive criticism.
Oral Communication
and Listening Abilities
The ability to speak clearly and persuasively
is another skill that is essential to your success in law
school and the practice of law. You must also have excellent
listening skills if you are to understand your clients and
others with whom you will interact daily. As with writing
skills, legal education provides excellent opportunities
for refining oral communication skills, and particularly
for practicing the forms and techniques of oral expression
that are most common in the practice of law. Before coming
to law school, however, you should seek to develop your
basic speaking and listening skills, such as by engaging
in debate, making formal presentations in class, or speaking
before groups in school, the community, or the workplace.
General Research
Skills
Although there are many research sources
and techniques that are specific to the law, you do not
have to have developed any familiarity with these specific
skills or materials before entering law school. However,
it would be to your advantage to come to law school having
had the experience of undertaking a project that requires
significant library research and the analysis of large amounts
of information obtained from that research. The ability
to use a personal computer is also necessary for law students,
both for word processing and for computerized legal research.
Task Organization
and Management Skills
To study and practice law, you are
going to need to be able to organize large amounts of information,
identify objectives, and create a structure for applying
that information in an efficient way in order to achieve
desired results. Many law school courses, for example, are
graded primarily on the basis of one examination at the
end of the course, and many projects in the practice of
law require the compilation of large amounts of information
from a wide variety of sources. You are going to need to
be able to prepare and assimilate large amounts of information
in an effective and efficient manner. Some of the requisite
experience can be obtained through undertaking school projects
that require substantial research and writing, or through
the preparation of major reports for an employer, a school,
or a civic organization.
The Values of
Serving Others and Promoting Justice
Each member of the legal profession
should be dedicated both to the objectives of serving others
honestly, competently, and responsibly, and to the goals
of improving fairness and the quality of justice in the
legal system. If you are thinking of entering the legal
profession, you should seek some significant experience
before coming to law school, in which you may devote substantial
effort toward assisting others. Participation in public
service projects or similar efforts at achieving objectives
established for common purposes can be particularly helpful.
General Knowledge
In addition to the fundamental skills
and values listed above, there are some basic areas of knowledge
that are helpful to a legal education and to the development
of a competent lawyer. Some of the types of knowledge that
would maximize your ability to benefit from a legal education
include:
- A broad understanding of history, including the various factors (social, political, economic, and cultural) that have influenced the development of our society in the United States.
- A fundamental understanding of political thought and of the contemporary American political system.
- Some basic mathematical and financial skills, such as an understanding of basic pre-calculus mathematics and an ability to analyze financial data.
- A basic understanding of human behavior and social interaction.
- An understanding of diverse cultures within and beyond the United States, of international institutions and issues, of world events, and of the increasing interdependence of the nations and communities within our world.
Conclusion
The skills, values, and knowledge
discussed here may be acquired in a wide variety of ways.
You may take undergraduate, graduate, or even high school
courses that can assist you in acquiring much of this information.
You may also gain much of this background through self-learning
by reading, in the workplace, or through various other life
experiences. Moreover, it is not essential that you come
to law school having fully developed all of the skills,
values, and knowledge suggested in this statement. Some
of that foundation can be acquired during the initial years
of law school. However, if you begin law school having already
acquired many of the skills, values, and knowledge listed
in this statement, you will have a significant advantage
and will be well prepared to benefit fully from a challenging
legal education.
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