- February 13th, 2006, 2:30 pm
#4054
From today's fishwrap:
ABA may accept Libertyhttp://www.newsadvance.com/servlet/Sate ... 4431&path=
Ron Brown
rbrown@newsadvance.com
February 13, 2006
A vote could come as early as today giving Liberty University’s School of Law provisional American Bar Association accreditation. The ABA’s Council of Legal Education and Admissions on Saturday night voted to recommend the law school’s provisional accreditation to the full house of delegates of the ABA.
Provisional accreditation means that the law school is in substantial compliance with ABA standards and has a reliable plan to achieve full compliance by the end of its third year. The 18-month-old law school is not eligible for full accreditation until the end of its second year. It is scheduled to graduate its first class in May 2007. How those graduates fare on bar exams is a factor in the law school receiving full accreditation. Provisional accreditation also means the school’s current 100 students would immediately be working toward accredited law degrees.
If accepted, LU would become Virginia’s eighth accredited law school.
“This is a big hurdle for us to clear this weekend,” said Bruce Green, dean of the law school.
The ABA’s house of delegates, which meets today in Chicago, must ratify the council’s recommendation before the provisional accreditation takes effect.
If LU’s accreditation is not on the house of delegates’ agenda today, the matter will be held over for the house of delegates’ next meeting in August.
ABA acceptance would represent the second significant broadening of LU’s accredited offerings in the past year.
Late last year, LU announced working agreement with the Virginia College of Osteopathic Medicine in Blacksburg to accept at least 10 LU graduates into its medical programs each year.
“Accreditation means a lot to the university,” Green said. “The law school is an important component of the university’s overall plan.”
Jerry Falwell Jr., LU’s vice-chancellor, said the addition of an accredited law school is just one more step in building a well-rounded conservative Christian university. “It’s what makes Liberty unique,” he said.
The law school, located it what was once a portion of an Ericsson manufacturing plant, has plans to add additional classrooms and offices and two new mock courtrooms to help it meet ABA’s requirements for full accreditation.
Already, the school has undergone a four-day evaluation by an ABA site team, which looked at every facet of the school, including its facilities, financial support, faculty and curriculum.
“We received a very positive report,” Green said. “One of the things they cited was our strong university support. They also recognized the quality of our student body and facilities and the rigor of our curriculum.”
Green and the Rev. Jerry Falwell, LU’s chancellor, appeared before the council Saturday in Chicago.
“The committee was very thorough in their questions of the dean and me,” he said. “I was not surprised that the council voted in favor of provisional accreditation. My opinion is we’ll hear something today.”