While you do not need a law degree to be a law clerk in some cases, clerking is often viewed and used as a great stepping stone before becoming an attorney.
In general, you can become a Law Clerk after completing your 4 year Bachelor's Degree in a related discipline. Depending on the type of Law Clerk role you're pursuing, you may want to explore certification in certified law clerk.
Law clerks have typically completed law school, while paralegals only have a relatively small amount of technical education in the field. Also, paralegals are confined to research and legal writing under the supervision of an attorney – they cannot provide legal advice.
Although there is no particular requirement that clerks be recent law school graduates (California, for example, hires experienced lawyers for clerk positions, who they call staff attorneys), in practice that is how the system has evolved in most of the United States.
To pursue a career as a court clerk, you might need to complete your high school education, consider pursuing a degree related to legal processes or business management and obtain certification.
The Faculty has two Departments – Jurisprudence and International Law and Private and Public Law. The Faculty has a 200 sitting capacity auditorium and a well-stocked library with E-Library facilities.
With a GPA of 3.7, Clark University requires you to be above average in your high school class. You'll need a mix of A's and B's, with a leaning toward A's. If you took some AP or IB classes, this will help boost your weighted GPA and show your ability to take college classes.
As a student in the law and society concentration, you'll examine — from multiple perspectives — the effects on society of law, legal institutions, and legal actors like lawyers and judges.
Earn a minimum college GPA of 3.5.
The law school uses a grading system ranging from A+ to F for JD and LLM students from the U.S. International LLM students and MSL students are evaluated on a “Credit” “No Credit”, or “Honors” basis only.