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Full-Text Articles in Law
Changing Directions At Columbia, Michael I. Sovern
Changing Directions At Columbia, Michael I. Sovern
Faculty Scholarship
Each period in history handles reform in its own way. In the earlier days we placed a heavy emphasis on legal realism. We stressed the need to adapt the learning of other disciplines to legal education and to bring the learning of other disciplines into the law school instructional program. As you know, that is an incomplete revolution. It remains a part of our present concern, but our focus today is different.
2-1-1: The 4th Revolution In Legal Education, Michael I. Sovern
2-1-1: The 4th Revolution In Legal Education, Michael I. Sovern
Faculty Scholarship
If we were to count the great changes in legal education from Charles Evans Hughes' day to this, we would find ourselves with a short list. The shift from apprenticeship to school was already well begun by the time Mr. Hughes was graduated from the Columbia School of Law in 1884. The case method was a new idea, but it would become the orthodox methodology in a startlingly short time. By the turn of the century, a number of law schools had moved from two- to three-year programs, but two years was still enough for admission to the bar in …