In the current conversation about reforming legal education, one of the constant refrains is that law schools must graduate students who are practice ready. Commentators go on to argue that for law schools to produce practice ready students, they must expand how they offer experiential learning. One potential way to do that is to expand clinical legal education programs. I worry that law schools (and others) are envisioning clinical legal education as a magic bullet that will solve all of the ills and imbalances present in current legal education. In this article, I demonstrate the unhelpfulness of the phrase practice ready, and dismantle the idea that clinical legal education, or any other singularly-focused intervention, can transfo...
In legal education, as in all education aimed at practice, the relationship between theory and pract...
In-house law clinics have long been recognized as a key form of experiential education. They offer a...
Legal education reformers have long argued that law school clinics address two related needs: first,...
In the current conversation about reforming legal education, one of the constant refrains is that la...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
This article assesses the primary product of law schools-the practicing lawyer-and reviews the criti...
Law school offers few opportunities for students to move beyond the ink and paper law of textbooks t...
Clinical legal education is garnering more attention as a vehicle for providing the training require...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Legal education in the United States is at a crisis point. Simultaneously confronting scathing criti...
Law school clinics are inspired by medical school clinical education, but usually operate quite diff...
This article reflects on the prospects for integrating insights from clinical teaching across the la...
Many articles have been written focusing on the benefits that the law students receive from particip...
In this Article, the author argues that where clinical education fits within the law school curricul...
The explosive growth in the number of law school clinics over the last 50 years began with an indivi...
In legal education, as in all education aimed at practice, the relationship between theory and pract...
In-house law clinics have long been recognized as a key form of experiential education. They offer a...
Legal education reformers have long argued that law school clinics address two related needs: first,...
In the current conversation about reforming legal education, one of the constant refrains is that la...
We conclude in this Article that expanded practice-based, experiential education will provide founda...
This article assesses the primary product of law schools-the practicing lawyer-and reviews the criti...
Law school offers few opportunities for students to move beyond the ink and paper law of textbooks t...
Clinical legal education is garnering more attention as a vehicle for providing the training require...
Current critiques of legal education push law schools toward seemingly contradictory goals: (1) prov...
Legal education in the United States is at a crisis point. Simultaneously confronting scathing criti...
Law school clinics are inspired by medical school clinical education, but usually operate quite diff...
This article reflects on the prospects for integrating insights from clinical teaching across the la...
Many articles have been written focusing on the benefits that the law students receive from particip...
In this Article, the author argues that where clinical education fits within the law school curricul...
The explosive growth in the number of law school clinics over the last 50 years began with an indivi...
In legal education, as in all education aimed at practice, the relationship between theory and pract...
In-house law clinics have long been recognized as a key form of experiential education. They offer a...
Legal education reformers have long argued that law school clinics address two related needs: first,...