Reuters, Law Professors Say ABA Is ‘Micromanaging’ With Proposal to Make Courses More Uniform:
Legal academics are pushing back against an American Bar Association proposal that would specify what law students should learn and how they should be assessed, saying it would squelch the freedom professors have to take different approaches within their classrooms.
Among the proposed changes are a mandate that law schools adopt and publish specific learning goals for every class and ensure that required courses with more than one section each term (usually taught by more than one professor), are aligned. Those changes are meant to help “law schools better understand what they are expected to do in these areas,” the ABA’s Council of the Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar said in an August memo explaining the proposal.
But some of the nearly 20 law professors and deans who provided public comments—most objecting to one or more aspects of the proposal—said the ABA would be overstepping its role by determining what is taught and how.



