The latest news in legal education from law school developments and policy changes to rankings, diversity efforts, and trends shaping the future of the profession.
Dawn Young, an assistant clinical professor of law at the University of Idaho College of Law said that working on a hypo a day can help you to grow a gigantic analytical muscle. She provides three reasons why you should do this every day.
A rebellion over U.S. News & World Report’s annual ranking is picking up steam as a number of the nation’s most prestigious law schools have announced they will no longer provide data to the much-watched — and criticized — assessment of law schools.
Law students can focus on just using the AI or they can take a closer look under the hood. By discovering how the AI is devised, you can learn quite a bit about what seemingly is going on in the noggins of human lawyers upon which the AI was initially modeled.Â
The American Bar Association Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admission to the Bar took a big step on Nov. 18, voting to drop its requirement that law schools use a standardized test.
Grades alone aren’t everything, however: your network can also have a major impact on your career.
The legal world is a small one and the connections you make during your law school years will become great resources down the road. If you’re wondering how to build a network in law school, here are some tips on how to get started.
Joan Bullock has not exactly enjoyed a smooth career in law school leadership. She was dean and president of Thomas Jefferson School of Law in San Diego when the American Bar Association hit it with sanctions for poor performance in 2017.
Kramer Levin in New York launched its Racial Justice Initiative Scholars program this year, a creative effort aimed at furthering its commitment to diversity and inclusion. Its first class of scholars targeted New York area law schools and included seven students in their first year of law school at Fordham University School of Law, New York University School of Law and Columbia Law School.
A student group at Harvard Law staged a sit-in on Oct. 6 to bring attention to its call for more reproductive justice offerings at the school, and gathered 1,110 signatures for a demand letter.