Why are students, alumni, and practitioners pressing law schools to change? Why are schools considering innovation? As we talk about change, we need to focus on the problems we’re trying to solve. Here are the major problems that I believe face legal education. In this post, I don’t attempt to substantiate the problems; plenty has been written elsewhere on these issues and we can talk about them more as the discussion unfolds. For now, I want simply to identify the problems that may drive proposals submitted to this site.
(1) The cost of attending a full-time JD program is too high for most students. “Too high” means both that some students are discouraged from attendance and that others find the return on their investment too low.
(2) Law schools are graduating many more JDs than traditional law practice can absorb. That has been true for at least the last four years, and expert predictions suggest that the surplus will continue.
(3) JD graduates are not trained in the ways that today’s marketplace demands. There are a variety of ways to address that problem: Schools could change, employers could change, or some other magic could occur. But the misfit seems clear.
(4) An increasing number of non-lawyers use legal principles quite effectively. Law schools have ignored this trend, which contributes to problem (2) and raises a separate question about schools’ educational mission. Should law schools attempt to educate this broader pool of workers? Addressing the overlap between law practice and law-related fields would also help schools understand the role of “JD Advantage” jobs for law graduates.
(5) A large number of citizens continue to lack basic legal services–but we cannot address that need by continuing to produce conventionally (and expensively) trained JDs who practice in customized (and expensive) ways. New technologies and management techniques now support cheaper delivery of high-quality legal services, but law schools don’t educate students to practice with those tools. Nor do most schools play an active role in exploring new means of delivering legal services.
(6) Law schools are not providing honest, thoughtful information to prospective students. Despite recent gains in transparency, schools are still inclined to market to consumers rather than engage future professionals. This distorts decisionmaking among prospective students and sets a tone for sharp practices rather than professionalism among lawyers.
(7) The federal loan system seriously distorts the market for legal education. Schools didn’t create the system, but they can work to reform it in ways that benefit students, prospective clients, and taxpayers. As professionals, schools have an obligation to respect those interests.
I welcome your reactions to these problems, as well as additions to the list.
Law School Cafe is a resource for anyone interested in reshaping legal education. Here is the basic information you need to use the site:
Cafe Tables
The site’s main page includes a series of posts called “Cafe Tables.” Each table focuses on a particular proposal for change. Some innovations are small, others are large. We draw these proposals from many sources: published papers, other websites, formal comments submitted to the ABA’s Task Force on the Future of Legal Education, and personal conversations. If you have a proposal, please let Deborah Merritt (the cafe manager) know at merritt52@gmail.com. We will be starting new tables regularly.
Each table includes a brief description of the proposal, links to sources, and observations or questions to start the conversation. The comment threads are open: We invite you to offer your reactions, critiques, and ideas for improvement on each proposal (but please read the “Comment Policy” below). The tables offer a way to explore the pros and cons of each proposal, as well as to refine ideas.
If you have experience with a proposed change, or would like to offer an extended comment, please let the cafe manager know (again, that’s merritt52@gmail.com). You can create a “perspective” post for a table, which will appear on the main page together with the original post. The perspectives allow further development of ideas.
Book Club
The Book Club complements the Cafe Tables by offering brief summaries of recent papers or books related to legal education. These pieces don’t always propose specific changes, but they offer useful insights to the problems facing us. Comments are open here as well, so feel free to post your reactions.
Comment Policy
To facilitate discussion in both the Cafe and Book Club, comment threads are open; we do not moderate comments before posting. But we will delete comments in which obsessive whining, trolling, or name calling substantially outweighs probative value. Cf. Federal Rule of Evidence 403.
Cafe Manager and Contributors
Deborah J Merritt manages the Law School Cafe; she is the site’s primary moderator and contributor. DJM is also the John Deaver Drinko/Baker & Hostetler Chair in Law, at Ohio State University’s Moritz College of Law, but the Cafe is an independent project. Deborah has written about many facets of legal education, teaches in both doctrinal classrooms and clinics, and has developed a seminar on the Business of Law.
Kyle P McEntee, the Executive Director of Law School Transparency, is the Cafe’s co-moderator, frequent contributor, and website designer. The Law School Cafe is a partner site of Law School Transparency.
Cafe Manager & Co-Moderator
Deborah J. Merritt
Cafe Designer & Co-Moderator
Kyle McEntee
Law School Cafe is a resource for anyone interested in changes in legal education and the legal profession.
Have something you think our audience would like to hear about? Interested in writing one or more guest posts? Send an email to the cafe manager at merritt52@gmail.com. We are interested in publishing posts from practitioners, students, faculty, and industry professionals.