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  2. Articled clerk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Articled_clerk

    Trainees are required to sign a contract agreeing to the terms of being an articled clerk, known as "articles of clerkship", committing to a fixed period of employment. Wharton's Law Lexicon defines an articled clerk as "a pupil of a solicitor, who undertakes, by articles of clerkship, continuing covenants, mutually binding, to instruct him in ...

  3. Trainee solicitor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trainee_solicitor

    On successful completion of the training contract, the trainee will qualify and be admitted as a solicitor. Trainee solicitors and training contracts were formerly known as articled clerks and articles of clerkship, respectively. For trainee solicitors, the Law Society recommend a minimum salary of £22,794 in London and £20,217 outside of ...

  4. Training contract - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Training_contract

    Trainee solicitors and training contracts were formerly known as articled clerks and articles of clerkship, respectively. In the UK, the barrister's equivalent is a twelve-month pupillage under a pupilmaster, in barristers' chambers.

  5. Legal professions in England and Wales - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_professions_in...

    In order to become a solicitor, trainees usually take a three-year undergraduate law degree (LL.B.) followed by a one-year Legal Practice Course and then, assuming the examinations have been passed, are employed for two years as trainee solicitors, a form of apprenticeship until about 1990 called articled clerk.

  6. Admission to practice law - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Admission_to_practice_law

    Candidates must then pass a series of examinations on eight separate areas of law. After these exams, the candidate must complete an apprenticeship in a law firm as an articled clerk for eighteen months, working at least 36 hours a week. After serving their articles, candidates must pass the final examinations on nine subjects of law and court ...

  7. Bar examination - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bar_examination

    The State Bar Exam is composed of two parts: a written exam and an oral exam. The written exam is composed of three written tests over three seven-hour days. The candidate writes two legal briefs, respectively on contracts and torts (and more generally about civil law), and criminal law, and a third court brief on civil, crime, or ...