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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
General Discussion
SQE without the PGDL?
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<blockquote data-quote="Jessica Booker" data-source="post: 83358" data-attributes="member: 2672"><p>Firms tend to be risk adverse and will put people through the GDL as a safety net more than anything, especially when there is little precedent set/evidence on whether you need the GDL to pass the SQE.</p><p></p><p>As soon as the stats prove that you don’t need the GDL to do well in the SQE, other firms will be quick to drop it too - it’s just that probably won’t happen for a few more years and when there is some data to prove it (or not).</p><p></p><p>Remember a lot of firms have put their trainees through an accelerated LPC in 7 months, and so it could easily be the case that you could cover this content in 12 months (especially if the firm only really cares about you pass the regulatory requirements, rather than actually requiring the knowledge).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Jessica Booker, post: 83358, member: 2672"] Firms tend to be risk adverse and will put people through the GDL as a safety net more than anything, especially when there is little precedent set/evidence on whether you need the GDL to pass the SQE. As soon as the stats prove that you don’t need the GDL to do well in the SQE, other firms will be quick to drop it too - it’s just that probably won’t happen for a few more years and when there is some data to prove it (or not). Remember a lot of firms have put their trainees through an accelerated LPC in 7 months, and so it could easily be the case that you could cover this content in 12 months (especially if the firm only really cares about you pass the regulatory requirements, rather than actually requiring the knowledge). [/QUOTE]
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Aspiring Lawyers - Applications & General Advice
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SQE without the PGDL?
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