Providing attorneys with the economic mobility and technical acumen to survive in today’s competitive marketplace should seem like the goal of any modern legal education. But oftentimes, it is an area where law schools fall short.
“There’s pretty wide consensus that the economic model law schools operate on is broken,” Kyle McEntee, executive director and co-founder of Law School Transparency, told the audience at the “Hacking Law School” session of the 2016 Legal Hackers International Summit. “It’s very expensive, and the cost structure is very difficult to change without substantial burdens on those schools.”
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