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Paralegal Apprenticeships Helping Increase Diversity in the Legal Profession - Jane Robson, CEO, National Association of Licensed Paralegals

08/05/23. The legal profession is often viewed as being exclusively for the ‘elite’. To be fair, there has been a lot of snobbery around the law—both real and perceived—and it is well documented that the traditional legal professions lacked diversity and did not reflect those they were representing. Let’s look at the issues and how the changes to apprenticeships will be of value to Personal Injury law practices.

Need for diversity

In recent years, the Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA) and Bar Standards Board (BSB) have sought to address this particular issue of inequality and lack of diversity. Just as they had previously noted that ethnic and gender equality was extremely beneficial to the sector, they recognised that having legal professionals from all walks of life brings similar benefits and this led to the first legal apprenticeships—the Higher Apprenticeships in Legal Services—being introduced in 2013.

In his speech on reforming legal education in 2012, the then Supreme Court President, Lord Neuberger, estimated the overall cost of entering the legal profession through university at around £100,000 including living expenses. He highlighted the inherent threat saying:

“A less diverse profession is an impoverished one, one less able to reflect and support a flourishing democracy committed to the rule of law”.

Apprenticeships help

The new apprenticeshipsbrought new options to those who had not gone on to higher education, but who wanted to work in Law and were put off by those high costs, and without the guarantee of a job at the end of it.

One of the many positives of paralegals undergoing an apprenticeship is that they get real-world experience of dealing with legal matters – something that is particularly important for those who become independent paralegal practitioners focusing on personal injury.

After the success of the initial apprenticeships four ‘Trailblazer apprenticeships’ were set up in England in 2016, replacing the earlier ones. Included was the Level 3 Paralegal Apprenticeship Standard which continues to grow in popularity, despite a few hiccups when it was first launched, including the End Point Assessment Organisation—CILEX—being sanctioned by Ofqual in 2019 following major issues with the first assessments in 2018.

The Level 3 Paralegal Apprenticeship Standard is now being completely overhauled, bringing many improvements designed to give the apprentices a great foundation on which to build a career as a Professional Paralegal. The new Standard is expected to be signed off and launched in Summer 2023. In addition, more End Point Assessment Organisations have been approved to deliver the End Point Assessment for the Level 3 Paralegal Apprenticeship Standard, giving apprentices, employers and training providers more choice for the delivery of the assessment. One of those new End Point Assessment Organisations is NALP (The National Association of Licensed Paralegals), the UK’s oldest established professional membership body for paralegals.

There are also moves to encourage smaller firms to take on apprentices. In-house legal teams can benefit from having a paralegal apprentice, as can small specialist firms, such as probate research or those offering Wills and succession planning services, many of whom may be wholly staffed by paralegals.

Paralegals are important

Many consumers cannot afford the fees charged by solicitors and barristers. Paralegals can do almost everything a solicitor does, with the exception of the Reserved Activities, which includes things like undertaking litigation and having a right of audience in a court. Paralegals are the fastest growing profession within the legal sector, so this experience can make the knowledge and qualifications gained during their apprenticeship invaluable to other potential employers—including personal injury firms—enhancing their transferable skills and opening more doors for them.

Apprenticeships have shown their worth and are here to stay, bringing diversity and opening doors to those for whom working in the legal sector including PI might otherwise have been just an unfulfilled dream.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Jane Robson is CEO of the National Association of Licensed Paralegals (NALP), a non-profit membership body and the only paralegal body that is recognised as an awarding organisation by Ofqual (the regulator of qualifications in England). Through its Centres around the country, accredited and recognised professional paralegal qualifications are offered for those looking for a career as a paralegal professional.

Web: http://www.nationalparalegals.co.uk

Twitter: @NALP_UK

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NationalAssocationsofLicensedParalegals/

LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/national-association-of-licensed-paralegals/

Image ©iStockphoto.com/filadendron

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