Awards
Target Award
Alternative Exit
Alternative Exit
Accreditation
Solicitors Regulation Authority (SRA)
Programme Offerings
Part-Time
F2F-JMU-SEP
Educational Aims of the Course
The Masters Degree in Legal Practice is designed to provide learners with a programme of study that satisfies Stages 1 and 2 of the Legal Practice Course Outcomes prescribed by the Solicitors Regulation Authority. It is structured to provide opportunities for students to build upon the knowledge and skills learnt during academic study to develop the high level of professional expertise and skills required for legal practice as a solicitor in England and Wales. The course is focussed on work-based activities including case study based role-play. In addition, the dissertation module on the programme allows students to undertake independent research in an area of law they would like to specialise in even though not necessarily taught on the programme. This LLM is a hybrid taught and research Masters Degree that will enable you to make a significant and measurable contribution to the body of legal knowledge in your chosen subject. The programme is designed for students who have a law degree or equivalent who wish to qualify as a solicitor by giving them the means of acquiring legal practice and skills.
Learning Outcomes
- Problem solving
- Numerical literacy
- Problem solving
- Communication
- Problem solving
- Digital capability
- Communication
- Intercultural
- Organisation
- Digital capability
- Collaboration
- Intercultural
- Leadership
- Leadership
- Organisation
- Problem solving
- Intercultural
- Problem solving
- Creativity
- Creativity
- Numerical literacy
- Problem solving
- Creativity
- Digital capability
- Problem solving
- Problem solving
- Intercultural
- Communication
- Numerical literacy
- Problem solving
- Organisation
- Creativity
- Digital capability
- Problem solving
- Organisation
- Intercultural
Teaching, Learning and Assessment
Acquisition of subject knowledge is achieved primarily through student centred transactional workshops supplemented by interactive large group sessions and supported with extensive learning materials. The approach to teaching and learning is informed by the LJMU Learning Teaching and Assessment (LTA) Strategy. Testing of the knowledge base is through a combination of unseen written examinations, assessed coursework in the form of drafted legal documentation and research reports, and live skills assessments. Learning outcomes in respect of core, skills, electives and pervasive subjects are prescribed in the Legal Practice Course Outcomes 2011 published by Solicitors Regulation Authority (these do not relate to the Dissertation module 7416LAWLP). The format of the assessment is appropriate to the individual skill. The advocacy assessment is set in the context of criminal practice and students are required to present a bail application or plea in mitigation set in the context of the magistrates court. The drafting assessment is set in the context of business law and practice and students are required to critique a business document and draft appropriate amendments. The interviewing assessment is a 30 minute role play client interview with an actor playing the client. It is set in the context of a probate scenario and students are assessed on areas including questioning, analysis and advising. The Practical Legal Research assessment requires students to analyse a factual scenario, identify and analyse relevant legal authorities, and report their findings in an appropriate manner. The writing assessment is set in the context of wills and administration of estates and students are required to draft a letter of advice to clients. There will also be a final dissertation module which includes a pass/fail element of the submission of a dissertation proposal amounting to 10% of the assessment of the module (7416LAWLP) following taught sessions on legal research methodology. The remaining 90% being the dissertation.