THE
NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR TEACHING
ETHICS AND PROFESSIONALISM (NIFTEP)
SECOND
ANNUAL WORKSHOP
December 15 – 17, 2006
Red
Top Mountain Lodge
Georgia
Web Site: http://law.gsu.edu/ccunningham/Professionalism/NIFTEP/
Program
The
first 2 days of the program were videotaped and can be viewed on-line by clicking
on the highlighted title of each session below. You must have the most current
version of Quicktime installed on your computer for
this webcasting. Click here
for a free download or update of Quicktime.
Friday,
December 15
3:30 - 5:30 pm
Opening
Session
Saturday,
December 16
9:30 - 11:00 am Session 1
Pilot
Project for Professional Proficiency Testing (see description below)
11:15
am - 12:30 Session 2
Teaching
Demonstration: The OPM Client Meeting Exercise
2:00 - 3:00 pm Session
3
The
Practice of Law as a Business: Not a Bad Thing? (see description below)
3:15 - 4:30 pm Session 4
Teaching
Ethics and Professionalism as Part of a Course on Fundamentals of Law Practice
(see description below)
Sunday,
December 17 (not recorded for webcast)
8:15- 10:00 am Closing plenary
10:00 - 12:00 Working group meetings
Advance
Preparation for Workshop:
Fellows, speakers and discussants were encouraged
to:
-- Review the 20 minute webcast on the Signet Accreditation program in
Scotland which is the model for the Tennessee pilot project for professional proficiency
training. You can view this webcast at: http://law.gsu.edu/Communication/Signet.htm
-- Read the short article by Professor Lisle Baker, "Enhancing Professional
Competence and Legal Excellence Through Teaching Law Practice Management,"
40 Journal of Legal Education 375 (1990). Professor Baker had originally planned
to participate in the workshop.
-- OPM Exercise. This exercise, originally
designed for use in Professional Responsibility: Heroes & Villains at at GSU,
was discussed during Session 2 on Saturday morning through viewing a videotape
of two students conducting this simulation. Download
in pdf format (4 pages) by clicking here.
Pilot
Project for Professional Proficiency Testing
The Tennessee Commission
on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization is considering a pilot project
to develop realistic, in-context proficiency examinations for practicing lawyers,
with a particular focus on client communications, ethical decision making, and
law practice management. The first application of such tests would be a new series
of intensive and demanding CLE programs, perhaps specifically designed for in-house
lawyers at large corporations; these lawyers would be at the 4-6 year point in
practice, getting ready to handle major matters without supervision and to supervise
others. This pilot is inspired by the example of the innovative Signet Accreditation
program being launched in Scotland by the Society of Writers to Her Majesty’s
Signet, an independent membership organization for lawyers which is one of the
oldest professional bodies in the world. More information on the Signet Accreditation
program is available at: http://law.gsu.edu/Communication/Signet.htm
Session 1 on Saturday was led by David Shearon, Executive Director of the Tennessee
Commission on Continuing Legal Education and Specialization, and NIFTEP Director
Clark Cunningham, who is serving as an academic consultant on the Signet Accreditation
program.
The
Practice of Law as a Business: Not a Bad Thing?
This session was led
by Professor Timothy Mahoney, PhD, CPA, CFA, who teaches philosophy and business
ethics at Providence College in Rhode Island. Professor Mahoney explored how models
of good business practice might address some of the most pervasive problems of
ethics and professionalism in the legal profession. He developed this theme during
his session at the Inaugural NIFTEP Workshop in September 2005 and expanded it
as a NIFTEP presenter at the Association of American Law Schools (AALS) Conference
on New Ideas for Law Teachers held in Vancouver in June 2006. He was joined
by Steve Olson, Associate Director of the Southern Institute for Business &
Professional Ethics at Georgia State University.
Teaching
Ethics and Professionalism as Part of a Course on Fundamentals of Law Practice
One of many innovative ideas discussed at the 2005
Inaugural Workshop was to integrate the teaching of ethics and professionalism
into a type of education urgently needed in the law school curriculum –
a course on the fundamentals of law practice, especially in the context of setting
up and managing a small or solo law firm. This topic garnered considerable discussion
at the NIFTEP session at the AALS Conference on New Ideas for Law Teachers and
also has connections with enhanced bridge-the-gap and mentoring programs for new
lawyers (see. e.g. http://www.gabar.org/programs/transition_into_law_practice_program/)
and alternate routes to licensing such as the Webster Scholars program being
piloted in New Hampshire (see http://law.gsu.edu/ccunningham/PDF/BarExaminer-Nov05-Cunningham.pdf
)