Search
This area does not yet contain any content.
Justinian News

Delay update ... "Extraordinary and excessive" delay - by the litigants ... Contest on costs ... Getting to grips with Qld industrial law takes time ... What is a "worker"? ... What is an "injury"? ... Justice Jenni frigging around ... Slow grind for earnest Circuiteer ... From judges' associate Ginger Snatch ... Read more >>

 

Politics Media Law Society


A biopsy on bias ... Darryl Rangiah and Oscar Wilde … A unity ticket … White flags at Ultimo … The Hyphen … BBC also on the ropes … Cease – FIRE … Why is Murdoch’s bias always wrong about everything? ... Read on >> 

This area does not yet contain any content.
Free Newsletter
Justinian Columnists

From the cutting room floor...Handsy Heydon goes to Perth ... Celebrity tour ... Conferenceville ... Dicey's job application speech from 2002 ... Other High Court judges mocked as "vegetables" ... Mason CJ ridiculed ... Speech bowdlerised for public consumption ... Courage of conviction MIA ... From our National Affairs Correspondent ... Read more >> 

Blow the whistle

 

News snips ...


Latest in the saga ... Reynolds v Commonwealth & Ebsworth ... More >> ... Online file >>

Justinian's Bloggers

London Calling ... Sizzling in the Old Dart ... Story of the complaining law graduate ... Tattle Life brought to book ... Beckham family feud over royal gong ... Floyd Alexander-Hunt's postcard ... Read more >> 

"What you are not being told by the media anywhere is that the death toll likely would not have been as high if it wasn't for DEI."

Charlie Kirk, American conservative and conspiracy theorist on the Texas floods ... The Charlie Kirk Show, July 9, 2025  Read more flatulence ... 


Justinian Featurettes

Zeitgeist litigation ... Matt Collins KC on live-streaming of high-profile trials ... Social media nightmare ... Abuse of barristers ... Chilling emails ... Trials as a form of public entertainment ... Courts sleepwalking into a dangerous zone ... Framework needed to balance competing interests ... Paper delivered to Australian Lawyers Alliance Conference ... Read more >> 


Justinian's archive

The Circumlocution Office ... "Reform" of legal fees - four centuries of chicanery ... Tulkinghorn awards prizes for "reforms" that increase legal costs ... Jacking-up revenue by replacing "necessary or proper" costs with "fair and reasonable" costs ... From Justinian's Archive, January 17, 2012 ... Read more >> 


 

 

« The war against David Hicks may be over | Main | Malcolm in the middle »
Tuesday
Jul172012

What's the point of law school?

Our Student-at-Large has been wondering the point of law classes ... Most won't practice law ... Those who become real lawyers are under the misguided impression that what they are learning is of some practical benefit ... Confusion 

Students - with their hero

MY lecturer paused for a moment, turned away from the microphone and sighed.

"Of course this material will only be relevant to those of you who end up as practicing lawyers," the prof insisted. "The class will however press on."

That we are all to be turned out as sparkling new professionals seems to be a deeply embedded assumption. 

On average only about half of all recent graduates end-up in practice, while the number of non-legal law graduates is increasing.

We're here to learn a new and somewhat unique way of thinking and the lecturers don't seem too concerned that much of what they impart will never be practically applied. 

It's a bit ironic when you consider that these same academics went through the mill of law school yet they have shunned private practice.  

Law students are being told to press on with the existing course models, despite the trend away from a life in the profession. 

It's curious. Lecturers may think they are being practical but it's pretty clear that practical considerations don't seem to feature prominently in almost any aspect of the degree.

This is a great relief. Of course, this degree is impractical. Flights of fiction permeate the whole process. 

Which is not to say that learning about murder is not fun. (I never knew so many people carry knives in the glove box of their car.) And if I ever need to launch a native title claim, public law principles might come in handy. 

Admittedly, for most of us students none of this is overly meaningful. In fact, it's among the things I'm enjoying most - along with Kirby's poetic dissents.  

The message is - just relax. Most of what we absorb will play little part in whatever we might do as practitioners, which makes the whole process ideal for law students who don't want to be lawyers.

The content of many lecture slides won't relate to real-life problems and the amount of time spent on a particular topic will be frequently out of all proportion to its future utility.

It's amazing how many of my fellow students haven't quite grasped this. 

Reader Comments

There are no comments for this journal entry. To create a new comment, use the form below.
Member Account Required
You must have a member account on this website in order to post comments. Log in to your account to enable posting.