Massachusetts School of Law
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Established | 1988 |
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School type | Private |
Location | Andover, Massachusetts, USA |
Enrollment | 635 |
Campus | Urban |
Homepage | http://www.mslaw.edu |
The Massachusetts School of Law is a law school located in Andover, Massachusetts. It was founded in 1988, and claims that its design and curriculum were influenced by the medical school educational model and legal scholars.
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[edit] Admission and academics
Through classroom instruction, simulated client experiences, and numerous live client experiences, students learn to practice law under the supervision of experts in their field. MSL does not require the Law School Admission Councils' (LSAC) Law School Admission Test (LSAT) for admission. However, MSL administers its own rigorous examination (MSLAT) similar to the LSAT, requires letters of recommendations and interviews every applicant for admission. Graduates are eligible to take the Massachusetts, and Connecticut Bar Examinations immediately upon graduation. After passing either of those bar exams, graduates are then eligible to take the bar exam in NH, WI, VT, ME, CA, DC, MD, WV. Graduates may also seek admission to the bars of many other states after practicing for 3-5 years (see local rules for bar admission).
[edit] Accreditation
The Massachusetts School of Law has failed to win accreditation by the American Bar Association, but is fully accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC).In 1990, the Massachusetts Board of Regents of Higher Education authorized MSL to grant the Juris Doctor degree. MSL subsequently applied for American Bar Association approval while filing an action in Federal Court in Philadelphia challenging some of the ABA's accreditation standards, arguing that those standards are of questionable educational value, violate antitrust laws, and needlessly increase tuition costs. MSL refused to comply with these standards, and the ABA refused to approve the school. As a result of its actions the MSL and Department of Justice filed complains against the ABA for antitrust violations. The summary judgment dismissing the MSL complaint was granted to the ABA on the trial level and the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit affirmed in 107 F.3d 1026. The case brought by DOJ was later settled by way of a consent decree between the ABA and the United States Department of Justice in which the ABA agreed to reform its accreditation process and eliminate some of its law school accreditation standards.
Among the standards used in that process were several related to student-faculty ratio. Under its standards in effect at that time, the ABA refused to count most of MSL’s full-time professors who also maintained a relationship with a law firm or who continued to practice law, or any of MSL's 85 adjunct faculty members in computing its student-faculty ratio (a standard that has since been changed as a result of the Department of Justice's antitrust action against the American Bar Association). In 1997, the New England Association of Schools and Colleges (NEASC) awarded accreditation to MSL. Many of its graduates now practice law throughout New England and California. With tuition relatively low by law school standards — less than half the average tuition of New England law schools — many of its graduates go into public service, including serving in the state legislatures in New England.
The school continues to criticize ABA standards that it fails to meet, and encourage the Department of Education to strip the ABA of its authority over other law schools. On December 4, 2006, Massachusetts School of Law officials asked a Department of Education committee to limit the authority of the ABA, complaining that the ABA's process was harmful to minorities and low-income students and needlessly drove up the cost of legal education. This action followed the publication of a DoE report that was critical of accrediting agencies for being overly concerned about financial and procedural issues and inadequately concerned about the school's success at educating its graduates.[1]
[edit] Notable alumni
- Steven A. Baddour, (1996), Massachusetts State Senator (served 2002 - present)
- David G. Baker (graduated 1996), first graduate of the school to argue a case before the United States Supreme Court: "Marrama v. Citizens Bank of Massachusetts and DeGiacomo"
- Arthur J. Broadhurst, (1991), member of the Mass. House of Representatives (served 1993 - 2007)
- Barry Finegold, member of the Mass. House of Representatives (served 1996 - present)
- Gregory G. Carson, (2007), Asst. Majority Leader, NH House of Representatives (served 1994 - 2000)
- Sylvan A. Lashley, (2006), President (1996-2003), Atlantic Union College
[edit] Sources
- Massachusetts School of Law
- http://www.usdoj.gov/atr/cases/massac0.htm
- Barron's Guide To Law Schools, 16th edition.
[edit] References
- ^ Pfeiffer, Sacha. "Mass. School of Law urges US to reduce clout of Bar", Boston Globe, 2006-12-05. Retrieved on 2006-12-05.