University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI)

 - Class of 1896

Page 71 of 298

 

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 71 of 298
Page 71 of 298



University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 70
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Page 71 text:

methods: that instruction should be personal so far as it is possible to niakc it so: that the inifornial exercise based upon an approved text or adjudicated cases should, in the ordinary and fundamental subjects at least, take the place of the formal lecture, and that in all the work the student should be subjected to the spur of daily examinations and discussions conducted with a view of testing his acquirenients and at the same time making him familiar with the methods of legal reasoning. It is apparent that to conduct a school along the lines indicated, a resident corps of competent instructors, whose duty it is to give their predominant energies to the Work, must be provided. This the leading schools have done. With us the change from the old to the new has been a conservative and gradual one. Regular text-book instruction was introduced in 1883. For a time it was confined to the junior class and to assign- ments from the Commentaries of Blackstone. A newly elected resident professor, the hrst to devote his entire time to the Depart- ment, had charge of the work. The departure was at .once recog- nized as a step in the right direction. From time to time other text-book courses were added. lVith the introduction of the three years' course, it was thought advisable not only to provide for additional text-book instruction, particularly in the earlier part of the course, but also to increase materially the number of required daily exercises. Seven of the eleven subjects of the first year and four of the eleven subjects of the second year are now taught with a text as the basis of the work. In the third year the change is less marked. The most of the instruction is still by lecture. But the lecture course of to-day, supplemented as it is by section quizzes and the careful study of selected cases, is to all intents and purposes a text-book course. While the resident Faculty has been largely increased in numbers, in order tolmeet the demands of changed methods and additional requirements, it is still the policy of the Department, and properly so I think, to retain upon its staff repre- sentative men from active professional life. The practitioner has, and must always have, an important service to perform in the Held of legal education. It is through him that the school is kept in touch with the activities of the profession. He brings to the discussions of the class-room a present experience that gives a practical touch to his instruction and challenges attentiO11- IH hifi hands the dry legal principle becomes a living reality, for he shows

Page 70 text:

or so important as in our own, nowhere within the pale of civiliza- tion is the matter of his general training for those functions so utterly neglected as with us. The necessity for reform should commend itself to the public generally quite as much as to the profession and the law teachers. . In its methods the law school of to-day is essentially a modern product. They are the result of an attempt on the part of legal educators to place the teaching of the law upon a university basis, so to speak. Until within a comparatively recent period, the law instructor was also engaged in active labors either at the bar or upon the bench: His duties as teacher were secondary. His services were frequently gratuitous and necessarily subject to pro- fessional demands. During the first twenty-four years of its exist- ence, the Law Department of. Michigan University had no one upon its Faculty who was devoting his entire energies to the school. For many years the period of instruction was confined to two terms of six months each. In 1884 the term was extended to nine months. And in 1886 the classes were for the Hrst time separated for the purposes of instruction. The history of the Department in the particulars mentioned finds it counterpart in the history of other schools. Under the old regime the success of the schools was due more to men than to methods. Many of them had upon their staff judges and lawyers of national reputation, men of broad culture, of extended and varied. professional experience, who were fitted by nature as well as by their acquirements for the work of instruction. Such men give to the earnest student a quickening impulse that becomes the companion of a life time. They bring to the lecture-room a wealth of experience, a freshness of illustration, and an up-to-date quality in their instruction that serves to stimulate and encourage. It was the good fortune of our Department that its first Faculty was made up of such men, and that it was able to retain them in active service for so many years. But the time has gone by when a school can de end t' - l f p en ire y or its instruction upon the necessarily irregular labors of men drawn from active life. Those best informed upon the subject of legal education very generally agree that instruction in the law should be conducted Wlth the regularity and system that characterize other universitv W0fk3 that 21 COUISC Of legal study should be a progressive one and should be pursued in accordance with Well established educational



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its application in actual controversies between man and man. fTe Supplements admirably the more strictly academic labors of his resident associate. A ' , It is very generally conceded that the school is the proper place for the theoretic study of the law. The oppOrtu11ifiCS Offered EITC vastly superior to any that can be had in the ofhce of the busy practitioner. But it has been urged, and With SOTI16 TC-215011, that while. the student may leave the school fairly well grounded in fundamental principles, he is but a child when he attempts their application. The practicing lawyer has frequently asked, and in no uncertain terms, to be delivered from the recent law-school graduate. From the Hrst, the schools have attempted something in the way of practical work. In the nature of the case, however, they were, until recently, able to accomplish very little in that direction. Without resident instructors, intimate personal work that is'absolutely necessary in teaching the practical application of legal principles was impossible. But with the advent of the well- equipped resident Faculty, a great change in this regard has taken place. The law school has become in a measure a great law office. The student is thrown into close personal relations with trained men, lwhose duty it is not only to teach legal principles, but to aid him with practical suggestions and directions. Under the new regime it has also become possible to inaugurate and carry on suc- cessfully the ordinary ofHce and court work of the practicing lawyer. No school in the country has gone so far in this direction as our own Department. The .work of the practice court has become a prominent feature of the law course and a most valuable one. The entire time of one member of the resident Faculty is given to it, and all of the resident members aid to a greater or less extent. The work embraces not only the practice of the old moot courts, which involved simply the argument of some question of law, but in addition the actual commencement of the action and its prose- cution to a judgment upon the issues of law involved, and also the trial by jury of questions of fact. Each student must become an actor in trials conducted with all the formality and incidents of actual controversies in court. The results of the work more than meet the expectations of th F l supplied. It is not claim ties can make trained law e acu ty. A long-.felt need has been ed, of course, that the present opportuni- yers, but only that they serve as ai helpful

Suggestions in the University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) collection:

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1954 Edition, Page 1

1954

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1957 Edition, Page 1

1957

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1965 Edition, Page 1

1965

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1966 Edition, Page 1

1966

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 118

1896, pg 118

University of Michigan Law School - Quad Yearbook (Ann Arbor, MI) online collection, 1896 Edition, Page 171

1896, pg 171


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