•
A mastery of procedural skills and communication skills.
• An advanced knowledge of procedural law, the law library,
and the preparation of legal documents.
• A working knowledge of substantive law and the ability
to perform specifically delegated substantive legal work under
an attorney’s supervision.
• The ability to interact on a professional level with attorneys,
clients, and other staff.
• The discipline to assume responsibility and exercise initiative
and judgment while adhering to legal ethical standards at all times.
•
The same high standard of ethical conduct imposed upon members
of the Bar.
• Excellent written and verbal communication skills.
• Knowledge and understanding of legal terminology and procedures,
as well as procedural and substantive law.
• The ability to assume responsibility, exercise initiative
and judgment, and prepare substantive legal documents within the
scope of assigned authority.
• Attaining this goal demonstrates dedication to professionalism
and acceptance of the challenge to be exceptional. Personal motivation
is necessary to attain such a goal.
PP
Examination Eligibility
Any
person who has Five years’ experience performing paralegal/legal
assistant duties (a candidate may receive a partial waiver of
one year if he or she has a post-secondary degree, other certification,
or a paralegal certificate; a candidate with a paralegal degree
may receive a two-year partial waiver).
The
Exam Covers
PART
1: Written Communications
PART 2: Legal Knowledge and Skills
PART 3: Ethics and Judgment Skills
PART 4: Substantive Law
Examination
Guidelines
All
four parts of the examination must be taken on the first attempt
with the exception of current PLS’s in which only Part
4 in Substantive Law is needed. If you do not pass the entire
examination on the first attempt, but do pass one or more parts,
you may retake the part (or parts) you failed. All failed parts
must be retaken at the same time.
Those passing the exam will receive a certificate which is valid
for five years. Recertification is required every five years and
may be achieved through the accumulation of continuing legal education
hours and activities.
Examination
Dates