header-logo header-logo

A paradigm shift

25 July 2014 / Jane Ching
Issue: 7616 / Categories: Features , Training & education , Profession
printer mail-detail
educationtraining_ching

Jane Ching reflects on two decades in legal education & looks to the future

Social media is full of surprises, not least the one presented by LinkedIn which prompted a colleague to congratulate me on my 21st anniversary with Nottingham Law School—really a rather terrifying anniversary. I know I had registered my six-year anniversary, on the entirely self-serving basis that that meant the limitation period had expired on any messes I had managed to leave behind in practice. A group of us, all recruited for the first year of the LPC in 1993, had also had a survivors’ lunch once we hit our 20th anniversary. But 21 is a rather different kind of watershed, marking, as it does, the coming of age of a particular form of vocational legal education for solicitors in England and Wales: what I will call the shift from the “knowledge era” to the “skills era”.

Days of yore

In June 1993, we still didn’t have a building to put our new LPC in. Even when we did, it only just had furniture in it for the first week

If you are not a subscriber, subscribe now to read this content
If you are already a subscriber sign in
...or Register for two weeks' free access to subscriber content

MOVERS & SHAKERS

NLJ career profile: Liz McGrath KC

NLJ career profile: Liz McGrath KC

A good book, a glass of chilled Albarino, and being creative for pleasure help Liz McGrath balance the rigours of complex bundles and being Head of Chambers

Burges Salmon—Matthew Hancock-Jones

Burges Salmon—Matthew Hancock-Jones

Firm welcomes director in its financial services financial regulatory team

Gateley Legal—Sam Meiklejohn

Gateley Legal—Sam Meiklejohn

Partner appointment in firm’s equity capital markets team

NEWS

Walkers and runners will take in some of London’s finest views at the 16th annual charity event

Law school partners with charity to give free assistance to litigants in need

Could the Labour government usher in a new era for digital assets, ask Keith Oliver, head of international, and Amalia Neenan FitzGerald, associate, Peters & Peters, in this week’s NLJ

An extra bit is being added to case citations to show the pecking order of the judges concerned. Former district judge Stephen Gold has the details, in his ‘Civil way’ column in this week’s NLJ

The Labour government’s position on alternative dispute resolution (ADR) is not yet clear

back-to-top-scroll