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The legal profession can command the highest salary amongst careers throughout the world . This is not achieved without a considerable workload as a law student. You have to run the extra distance and burn the candle at both ends absorbing case studies, apprenticeships and writing reports to name a few  Read more...

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Becoming a Trainee Solicitor – Tips on Getting a Legal Job

 

Fortunately for anyone who wants to become a solicitor there are quite clear routes to getting a job. Providing you put in the time & effort you should be able to become a solicitor & get a law job.

In order to train to become a solicitor there are some unavoidable prerequisites. The simplest path is to gain a law degree from an accredited university. Once you have completed your degree in law you are perfectly qualified to begin the process of becoming a lawyer.

However, often people are unsure of their career intentions when they choose their subject of study at university. This needn’t be a problem though, anyone with a degree should be able to carry out a one year conversion course. This builds on experience you have gained in your current degree but introduces you to all aspects of law & the knowledge you would need to train to become a solicitor.

If you don’t have a degree this doesn’t prevent you from becoming a solicitor. Provided you have some extensive legal experience, such as working for a law firm in a non-legal position you may be qualified by experience. The route to becoming a solicitor is slightly different to those taken by graduates but the Institute of Legal Executives provide a combination vocational & comprehensive academic courses to prepare you to become a solicitor.

No matter which route you take to get to this stage now everyone is required to take the Legal Practice Course (LPC) which takes one academic year, if you are working full time or two for those studying part-time. Places on the course themselves can be quite competitive at the most highly regarded institutions & universities but you wouldn’t be hugely disadvantaged by taking the course where ever is most convenient.

Once you have completed the LPC, aspiring solicitors are required to apply for two year trainee positions at a legal firm or an organisation like the Crown Prosecution Service. Competition for these positions is high, especially at the top law firms. It’s vital to polish your CV & brush up on your interview skills to make the best impression.

Though the training courses & exams are finished, during the traineeship you will still have to pass the Professional Skills Course (PSC) before you can become a solicitor proper. The course takes an equivalent 12 days & covers three compulsory courses plus a number of elective courses.

Once you’ve ticked off all these boxes on your to do list you will have your “Admission to the Roll” you can apply for a “practising certificate” which enables you to offer legal advice & represent your clients.

Robert Proctor is part of Legal Week Jobs, a website specialising in legal jobs and recruitment including gradute, legal secretary, solicitor & trainee solicitor jobs.

For more information please visit Legal Week Jobs.

 

Overview of Law in the United Kingdom
Royal Courts of Justice Emblem

Background

There are three separate jurisdictions within the UK - England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland. All three are based upon the common law system. The UK is also a member state of the European Union and subject to European law. Whilst the UK does not have a written constitution, the Human Rights Act 1999 incorporates in UK law the European Convention on Human Rights.

The legal education systems of the three jurisdictions in the UK involve two pre-qualification stages- the Academic stage and the Vocational stage. This background describes the system in England and Wales. The approach to legal education is very similar in the other jurisdictions, although each has its own distinctive characteristics.

The undergraduate law degree is the most common form of entry into the legal profession, followed by a one year professional course and examination (the professional stage). This bifurcation of legal study has resulted in the development of undergraduate programmes which largely concentrate upon the analysis of legal texts and the identification of legal principles, whilst the Vocational stage has more recently turned its attentions to the knowledge, skills and competencies that practising lawyers require study hard and if needed take a student personal loan.


Concepts
  • 3 separate jurisdictions – England and Wales, Scotland and Northern Ireland
  • Common law system
  • European assimilation
  • Division between academic and vocational stages
  • Rapid growth of undergraduate study of law in past 10 years
  • Reforms of legal services affecting lawyer demand and professional identity
  • Technological development in delivery process
  • .Reform of learning and teaching methods, quality control, and access affecting higher education
  • Global law markets, democratisation and development