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SQE - general discussion
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<blockquote data-quote="Jessica Booker" data-source="post: 70361" data-attributes="member: 2672"><p>Unless your QWE is over 4 months with each employer, with the type of firms you want to work for, and has high levels of responsibility, just because it may qualify as QWE don’t expect firms to recognise it as such.</p><p></p><p>You don’t need to do an LLM prep course though. There will be cheaper options out there if you do choose to do the SQE. Depending on what type of learner you are, you could technically self study and have no costs at all (although access to the information to learn is likely to be sketchy the first year or two).</p><p></p><p>The key factor for me at the moment is that if you do the LPC you will be exempt from SQE stage 1 but not the other way around. This is basically encouraging firms to move to the SQE model but allow the transition to work effectively at the same time.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jessica Booker, post: 70361, member: 2672"] Unless your QWE is over 4 months with each employer, with the type of firms you want to work for, and has high levels of responsibility, just because it may qualify as QWE don’t expect firms to recognise it as such. You don’t need to do an LLM prep course though. There will be cheaper options out there if you do choose to do the SQE. Depending on what type of learner you are, you could technically self study and have no costs at all (although access to the information to learn is likely to be sketchy the first year or two). The key factor for me at the moment is that if you do the LPC you will be exempt from SQE stage 1 but not the other way around. This is basically encouraging firms to move to the SQE model but allow the transition to work effectively at the same time. [/QUOTE]
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