-- By YejinJennyHan - 27 Feb 2009
Knowledge of the law is essential to modern life: it enables people to use the legal system, to change their behavior so they don’t break it, and to act with confidence. Providing legal education in secondary schools would provide a sound starting point to promote understanding of the law within the general public.
Though people can consult both law firms and the Internet to learn about the law and their rights, both alternatives are flawed. Law firms often charge high sums for legal advice, and researching the millions of statutes, codes, and acts that make up the U.S. legal system, or even law books written in confusing legal language, without guidance would overwhelm most people. If a tenant in an apartment complex is injured in a dangerously maintained common area and is unaware of his rights, he faces a difficult choice: does he hire an expensive lawyer for legal advice, engage in a potentially fruitless search for information, or does he let it go without further expense? Because legal advice is expensive, and legal resources confusing and time-consuming, individuals who are unaware of their rights often let them go unenforced. The capacity to use the legal system stems from the awareness of the rights in the first place.
Individuals can also avoid unknowingly violating the law by learning it. For instance, a property owner unfamiliar with the adverse possession rule might lose his property upon return from study abroad due to the expired statute of limitations. Had he learned about the adverse possession rule earlier, he would have behaved differently, by, for instance, leasing the land. Good faith ignorance of the law is rarely a valid legal defense, yet knowledge of the law is difficult to come by. If individuals are to be governed by the law they should be provided a degree of basic legal education.
Knowledge of the law also elevates self-esteem. Our society respects law, and people get a sense of self-satisfaction from having knowledge about it. I remember the night of the first official banquet for 1Ls, where I saw proud smiles on the face of each student; it seems likely that the prospect of being in law school and of becoming a person with the powerful tool of legal knowledge played a significant role in those expressions.
With a well-designed basic curriculum in place, schools could hire law school students as teachers. Appointing law school students would benefit both the school and the law students. For law students, the teaching experience would train them to effectively present legal matters, and the schools would conserve resources by hiring students instead of certified teachers. In the 1970s, William A. Wirt High School in Indiana offered a legal educational program taught by local law school students who received credits for participating in the program. The law students noted after participating in the program that they sharpened their research, communication, and oral skills. Considering the difficulty of hiring professional instructors with legal educational backgrounds to teach, hiring law students would be a good solution.
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