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Scott,
I don't want to enter the lists again on this, but I must ask that you drop the "lawyer" argument. You're not a lawyer, and I don't think the nature of legal training advances your point, but rather militates against it.
Any lawyer worth his salt knows that law school is generally a vetting process and does not provide a correlation with with success as an attorney. What correlation there is, relates to the quality of students admitted rather than the training received. Businesses that hire outside counsel do not focus on where a man or woman went to law school, but rather what their training in the workplace was, what firm they are (or were) with, and what their skill level is now. That is a fact that I have observed first hand in business and the legal profession at the highest levels (when I graduated, Michigan law was ranked in the top 5 in the nation, so I am no academic slouch).
As for continuing ed for lawyers, it is among the biggest jokes going. Almost every lawyer views it as a complete waste of time (at worst) or a "free" vacation at best. Google the best seminars and see where they are held (hint: NYC, Ft Lauderdale, Scottsdale, etc). Lawyers do everything they can to avoid them, because it stops the real growth of a lawyer - work in the field with other (better) lawyers.
__________________ Fredrick T. Greco
Senior Pastor, Christ Church PCA (Katy, TX) Christ Church Blog "The heart is the main thing in true religion...It is the hinge and turning-point in the condition of man's soul. If the heart is alive to God and quickened by the Spirit, the man is a living Christian. If the heart is dead and has not the Spirit, the man is dead before God." (J.C. Ryle)
Last edited by fredtgreco; 03-30-2008 at 11:04 PM.
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