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Edition: July 2007



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Online Law Degrees: Are
they really worth it?
By: Peter J. Loughlin
Years
ago earning a law degree meant putting your life on hold, moving away from
home and family for several years to attend law school full time.
Finally, evening and weekend classes, a new
concept in legal education, came along to help law students cope with
inflexible schedules. Now the evolution in legal education has generated a
whole new concept-online law degrees.
Online law courses have been growing in popularity in American Bar
Association (ABA) approved law schools, but they have yet to fully embrace
the online law degree earned completely through distance learning. Still,
online law degrees are recognized in some states as being fully
accredited-or at least recognized for purposes of entering the legal
profession.
Generally, the same coursework completed in the classroom is required of
distance-learning law students and with today's technology the experience
can be more effective than sitting in a brick and mortar law school.
Alternative to Traditional Law School
Naturally many new (and some older) law schools have seen the writing on the
wall and have launched their own online law programs. So long as standards
of quality education are maintained I see no reason for opposition.
While there is no doubt that ABA approved law schools provide an outstanding
level of excellence in legal education, they're just not a good fit for many
of today's prospective lawyers.
If a high quality online law degree can be earned on the Internet, what's
the problem? I've always felt that learning takes place between two ears
rather than four walls, am I right?
The online law degree provides a viable alternative to traditional ABA law
schools in preparing one for a career as a lawyer. Quite simply it may be
the best or only solution for students who cannot commit themselves to study
at a traditional law school.
With an online law degree option they can keep their current job, maintain
family obligations and save countless wasted hours commuting to and from a
traditional law school campus.
California Connection
Online law degrees are more common in California, a state where more than
25% of practicing attorneys graduated from non-ABA law schools. As online
law degrees grow in popularity, this number is likely to increase and spread
to other states.
Although distance-learning law degrees are nothing new, online law schools
are now attracting a huge number of students from diverse backgrounds whose
family and/or work obligations make online study the right choice for them.
Critics of online law degrees say Internet based courses cannot replicate
the classroom experience and that some online law schools are designed to
merely prepare students to pass the bar without giving them a full legal
education.
In my opinion the purpose of the bar exam is (or should be) to weed out
those law students who have not benefited from a broad-based legal education
or are incapable of demonstrating it.
Students who have not received a broad-based legal curriculum are unlikely
to pass a bar exam anyway. And, there are graduates from top law schools
that have been unable to pass a bar exam-while some graduates of online law
schools have passed on their fist attempt-even in California which boasts
the hardest bar exam in the country.
Finding the Right Online Law Degree Program
How do you find the right law school? The old-fashioned way works best.
Start out by getting a list of all the available online law degree programs.
Then set aside some time to contact the schools directly and ask questions-a
lot of questions.
It's a good idea to find out something about the school's track record too
by contacting the appropriate state agency to checkout their complaint
record. Finally, after confirming the school's curriculum and cost are a
good fit for you, you'll want to check to see that gradates of the school
are permitted to take the bar exam.
About the Author:
Peter J. Loughlin is a
lawyer with the Loughlin Law Firm, an Immigration and Social Security law
firm in Naples, Florida and a principle member of JurisConsults Group, a
consulting firm specializing in International Taxation and Banking
Compliance issues.
Member: State Bar of California, Federal Bar Association, International Bar
Association, American Immigration Lawyers Association and National
Association of Social Security Claimants Representatives.
He is a distinguished fellow of the Royal Society of Fellows and fellow of
the American Academy of Financial Management.
Mr. Loughlin serves as a legal advisor to the World Natural Health
Organization and current member of the AAFM Global Board of Academic
Advisors and Professors. He is the author of The Law School Bible and other
numerous legal, taxation and trade related articles.
Peter J. Loughlin achieved his dream of earning a college & law degrees
using only distance learning. Now he helps others achieve their dreams at
www.MaxStudy.com

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