• Comment (75)

Online Law Schools Have Yet to Pass the Bar

Many argue that fully online programs aren't the path to a traditional legal career.

March 23, 2011 RSS Feed Print
The legal industry still doubts whether a law education online can be effective.

The legal industry still doubts whether a law education online can be effective.

Updated: 6/20/12

Enrolling in an online J.D. program may seem like a convenient alternative to spending three years and more than $100,000 on a traditional legal education, especially for working adults—but prospective students should be wary of the potential pitfalls, experts say.

Wholly online J.D. programs are not accredited by the American Bar Association, and graduates of the programs are eligible only to take the California Bar Exam, given that it's the only state in which online law schools can officially register (though some states have been known to make exceptions on an individual basis). In all, there are 12 unaccredited distance or correspondence law schools registered in California, including Concord Law School of Kaplan University, California School of Law, and the Abraham Lincoln University School of Law.

[See U.S. News's rankings of Top Online Education Programs.]

Because the schools are unaccredited, if students wish to complete their legal education and take the California Bar, they must pass the state's First-Year Law Students' Examination after they've completed their first year of school. 

Despite these obstacles, the programs are growing. Concord, for instance, was launched in 1998 and had only eight online students. Now the school boasts 1,200 students and has had more than 1,300 J.D. and executive J.D. graduates. The school's first time California Bar pass rate is 37.1 percent, which is on par with a few of the state's ABA approved law schools, and school officials are confident the sector is gaining momentum. 

"We live in a world where technology has become increasingly entrenched in corporate and social environments," says Concord spokesperson Donna Skibbe. "More and more traditional law schools are providing online offerings to meet student demand. So, we believe that our innovative approach to legal education will one day be the norm rather than the exception." 

[Find out what to expect as a first year law student.]

Other law schools aren't as certain of the potential of online legal education. With an enrollment of more than 70,000 online students, Liberty University is the nation's largest private, nonprofit school. However, the Liberty University School of Law only offers a campus-based J.D. program and has no plans to start an online program in the near future. Though the school has undoubtedly grown comfortable with the online model, officials feel that educating law students online may not be in their best interest.

"You would lose the interactivity that you would have in the classroom that is really helpful in preparing people not only to know the material, but to be able to articulate the material," says Mat Staver, dean and professor of law at Liberty University School of Law. "I think it would undermine a significant aspect of legal education." 

Some employers too, are wary of applicants possessing degrees granted by wholly online law schools. Steven Mindel, managing partner at the Los Angeles law firm Feinberg, Mindel, Brandt & Klein, claims online students aren't able to make the connections that are integral to a lawyer's ability to succeed professionally. Human interaction in law school, he adds, can be more important than a student's ability to absorb the intricacies of the law. 

"If practicing law was only about being able to pass a bar exam for a state, you'd have more lawyers than you have now, but law is a lot more than that," Mindel says. "It's about learning a way of thinking and interacting. A big part of that learning is the interaction you have with your classmates and others." 

Officials at these online law schools maintain that their programs aren't targeted at students interested in a career practicing law at a large firm, and are confident that, in time, the degrees will hold more esteem with employers.

Tags:
law,
ABA,
law school,
careers,
online education,
academics

Reader Comments Read all comments (75)

Add Your Thoughts
Your comment will be posted immediately, unless it is spam or contains profanity. For more information, please see our Comments FAQ.

It has been common knowledge in Higher Ed for some time that the big worry if online schools are permitted it will cut into the profits of the traditional programs - this feigned concern over the "quality of education" is pretext for protecting the economic interests of these schools, and the law firms hiring the graduates from these programs.

As for the quality of the programs I can only speak to my personal involvement - I have completed both face-to-face instruction as well as online education in several areas of study. The Concord program is _very good_ - however I wouldn't recommend it unless you go into it understanding the limitations on your career due to ABA rules. The only people I've ever heard knock the Concord program were people who believed they could go back and practice law in another state outside of CA and quickly realized that for the most part (with a few case-specific exceptions) is not really possible.

Another common complaint I hear from judges, attorneys, and law professors who have no experience outside of traditional in-class instruction is on-line education "lacks interaction" and lacks "the interactivity that you would have in the classroom." This is total nonsense. In my own experience with on-line law school the challenge is to limit the amount of time you spend interacting with classmates. You an blow a lot of time on study sessions and working groups - it is fun and you meet a lot of people - but this really has to controlled and sometimes you just have to say you are sorry and you need those 2 hours to work civil procedure (or whatever) on your own. I found the traditional classroom much more isolating and I didn't get involved with any of the other students when attending in-person classes. During my undergraduate education I lived on campus and had a lot of interaction (sometimes to the determent of my grades) but this was in the dorms, not the classroom.

Zack Rice of IA 3:49PM May 19, 2013

when online MBA's and correspondence schools for mba first started everyone said the same thing.

me of CO 12:43PM March 02, 2013

Hello....it is a tragedy that online law programs are not better embraced. I have taken both in face classes and online law classes. I have to say, with all honesty, it is in the hands of the instructors and the colleges who hire them. I took an in the face litigation course from a small community college and received a D for my effort. The instructor worked for the the local prosecutor's office and was a poor instructor, to put it mildly, who never graded anything and only kept students an hour and a half of a three hour course. It was pretty apparent she did not like older students.....and I am old. I retook the class online and received an A . I learned so much more from the online class and was pleased.

Carley Hudson of IN 10:34AM February 25, 2013

advertisement

Advance your career with an online degree

Knowledge Centers

Looking at colleges? Find out what you need to know.