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Too Many
Lawyer Factories and More on the Way
By Leigh Jones
The National Law Journal
New York Lawyer
June 3, 2008
As many as 10 new law
schools are in the works, with the majority of them proposed in the
eastern part of the country.
While their proponents
insist that the schools will serve the needs of their communities
and beyond, the plans are drawing sharp criticism from those who
argue that creating more law schools is irresponsible.
With three new law schools
proposed in New York alone and others also in the early stages in
Connecticut, Maine, Pennsylvania and elsewhere, developing
facilities to pump out juris doctor degrees is the goal du jour for
institutions looking to build a bigger name for themselves.
Planners assert that their
schools will offer specialized programs and innovative curricula to
J.D. hopefuls. Critics, however, point to a tight job market and
starting salaries that do not cover the ballooning costs of tuition
for the majority of students already graduating from the nation's
hundreds of law schools.
"I have no doubt that those
concerns are valid, but it's whether they end up being compelling
reasons to pull back on starting a law school," said Loren D.
"Chip" Prescott Jr. He is the newly appointed dean of the
Wilkes University Law School Planning Initiative, which is
pushing to open a law school in Wilkes-Barre, Pa., by 2010.
Wilkes University will be
competing with Pennsylvania's other schools, which include
Duquesne University School of Law; Pennsylvania State University
Dickinson School of Law; University of Pennsylvania Law School;
University of Pittsburgh School of Law; Temple University James E.
Beasley School of Law; Villanova University School of Law; and
Widener University School of Law.
Prescott cited a number of
reasons to launch a law school in Pennsylvania. First, the closest
law school to the area is a two-hour drive away, he said. Second, he
sees a need for creative, hands-on training absent in legal
education today. Third, a "brand new school," he said, can provide
such innovation more readily than older schools constricted by
outmoded traditions.
"A school starting from
scratch can make a unique contribution," he said.
Crowded in N.Y.
In New York, 15 law schools
already are in operation. As in Pennsylvania, they run the rankings
spectrum, from top-tier New York University Law School to
Touro College Jacob D. Fuchsberg Law Center, ranked in the
fourth tier by U.S. News & World Report.
Plans are in motion within
the State University of New York system to launch two law schools:
one at Stony Brook University on Long Island and another in
Binghamton, about 200 miles from New York City. In addition, state
lawmakers also have set aside money for a law school upstate in
Rochester, which would be affiliated with St. John Fisher College.
Other proposals in the
Northeast include a new law school at the University of New Haven
in Connecticut and another at Husson College in Bangor,
Maine. Elsewhere in the country, Louisiana College in
Pineville, La., is set to open a Christian-focused law school, and
Lincoln Memorial University is planning a law school in
Knoxville, Tenn.
In Boise, Idaho,
Concordia University has a law school in the works and
University of Idaho College of Law is expected to open a branch
in Boise as well.
Almost all of the new
schools will seek accreditation from the American Bar Association
(ABA). Nearly all states, with the notable exception of California,
require students to graduate from an ABA-accredited law school in
order to take the bar exam.
All of those schools are in
addition to University of California, Irvine Donald Bren School
of Law, expected to open in autumn 2009, and at least seven
other law schools that have popped up across the country in the last
five years seeking accreditation by the ABA.
"This is beyond absurd,"
said William Henderson, a professor at Indiana University
School of Law — Bloomington. His scholarship focuses on the
legal job market.
Henderson's research, which
is based on data obtained from the ABA and ALM Research, a
subsidiary of the parent company of The National Law Journal, shows
dismal job prospects for many law graduates from lower-tier schools
already in existence. New law schools historically have fallen into
the lower tiers of the rankings by U.S. News & World Report, at
least in their first years of operation.
Part of Henderson's
research focuses on so-called "bad outcomes" experienced by law
students, which include graduates who were unemployed nine months
after graduation, whose job status was unknown or students who
flunked out. He determined the 50 law schools with the highest
percentages of "bad outcomes," and revealed a range between 49.1%
and 27.9% of bad outcomes among the 20 law schools with the highest
percentages of such outcomes. All of those schools were ranked
either in the third or fourth tier by U.S. News & World Report.
"The popular perception is
that there's a big monolith of wealth," he said. "The reality is
that some people are making lots of money and a lot of people are
not able to make a living."
Henderson's research is
based on data collected from 2005 and 2007. But the job market may
be even bleaker now due to a downturn in the economy in 2008.
The Cyber
Chase: Online Law Schools Wins Some Respect
By Vesna Jaksic
The National Law Journal
New York Lawyer
November 2, 2007
Concord Law School, the first fully online law school, has announced
its merger with Kaplan University, making it the first online law
school with regional accreditation.
Based in Davenport, Iowa, Kaplan University provides a number of
online degrees, including law degrees, to more than 27,000 students.
Los Angeles-based Concord Law School was founded in 1998 and serves
about 1,500 students. Most are mid-career professionals, 40% of whom
already have graduate degrees.
Both Concord Law School and Kaplan University are owned by Kaplan
Higher Education Corporation. Concord Law School is now Concord Law
School of Kaplan University.
Because Kaplan University is regionally accredited, the merger will
make Concord students eligible for federal student loans and allow
them to defer their past student loan payments. The merger will also
allow the schools to expand course offerings to students and provide
joint programs.
"This merger makes Concord Law School part of a regionally
accredited University, which adds a level of prestige to the
rigorous legal education that we provide to our online students,"
Barry Currier, dean of Concord Law School of Kaplan University, said
in a statement. The eligibility for loans will also make the school
more accessible to students who may not otherwise have been able to
pursue a law degree, he said.
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