Preparation for Law
205
Administration Building, 419-372-2015
All
accredited law schools in Ohio, like most accredited
schools throughout the country, require a college
degree for admission. A college degree is also
a prerequisite to taking the Ohio Bar Examination
and the bar examinations for most other states.
Beyond the minimum requirements for admission,
law schools emphasize the value of a broad,
general program of arts and sciences for the
prospective law student. Above all, they stress
the importance of acquiring certain intellectual
skills and abilities rather than a particular
body of information. Foremost among these skills
are facility in writing and speaking, logical
reasoning, and the use of abstract concepts.
Because the student can develop these skills
in a variety of courses, there is no basis on
which to prescribe a rigid and detailed "prelaw
curriculum" or recommend any particular
major.
Law
schools, however, uniformly emphasize the special
value of courses in which considerable writing
is required. In addition, courses in American
government help acquaint the student with the
basic legislative, administrative, and judicial
processes of our society. Business and economics
courses often provide an understanding of business
and financial concepts and terms with which
the lawyer may deal. Other disciplines—such
as history, philosophy, political science, psychology,
and sociology—offer concepts, information,
and perspectives that are important in dealing
with modern legal issues. Finally, prelaw students
may wish to take a course in which case method
is used, to test whether their aptitudes lie
in this direction.
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