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No law degree required for would-be solicitors

Legal training overhaul would promote diversity and cut costs, regulator says

Published on
October 17, 2013
Last updated
May 27, 2015

Solicitors will no longer need to have a degree in order to qualify under a radical shake-up of legal training that it has been claimed could spell the 鈥渄eath鈥 of some law undergraduate courses.

The changes, outlined in a policy statement from the Solicitors Regulation Authority this week, aim to make it cheaper to qualify as a solicitor and to attract a greater diversity of people into the profession.

Currently, the main route to qualification is for a student to take an undergraduate law degree followed by a legal practice course, or a graduate diploma in law after a bachelor鈥檚 degree in a different subject.

This is then followed by a two-year training contract in a legal firm.

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But according to Julie Brannan, director of education and training at the SRA, this route is a 鈥渟traitjacket鈥 that 鈥渄oesn鈥檛 really fit with the modern world鈥.

This was because there were a 鈥済reater variety鈥 of institutions offering legal services and more paralegal and specialist roles within firms, she explained, so a degree-only route 鈥渘o longer seems appropriate鈥.

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Instead of requiring solicitors to go down this university route, they would be able to qualify simply by demonstrating that they have the 鈥渟kills, knowledge and attributes鈥 required of the profession, she said. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 mind if you have a law degree or not. It鈥檚 none of our business.鈥

The SRA had not decided exactly how it would assess potential solicitors, she explained, or who would test them on their skills. It might still require them to have undertaken a period of practice before they can qualify, she added.

The shake-up would 鈥渙pen up the market for competition鈥, she said.

This meant that universities could find 鈥渆xciting new ways they can reach students they wouldn鈥檛 otherwise reach鈥 and help them 鈥渙vercome the financial barriers鈥 by offering less expensive legal courses, for example higher level apprenticeships, she added.

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Nigel Savage, president of the University of Law, said that the reforms could mean 鈥渢he death of some turgid law degrees that have developed over the years鈥.

But Peter Crisp, dean of BPP Law School, cautioned that the degree route would still remain the main way people qualified to become a solicitor. 鈥淢ost solicitors will continue to qualify by the traditional route,鈥 he predicted.

Apprenticeships might be taken up by some, he said, but major law firms would continue to take graduates because they wanted them 鈥渙ven-ready鈥 for work and did not necessarily want to train them.

He added that BPP was working with a number of law firms to develop a new legal apprenticeship course.

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Ms Brannan argued that currently there was no way of knowing what level students had reached at the end of their course, but a standardised test would ensure that 鈥渆verybody who goes through that is at the same level鈥.

The current university-based route will operate until 2017-18, she said, while the new assessment system would be phased in beforehand.

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david.matthews@tsleducation.com

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