Nottingham Law School is a law school in the UK with over 100 full-time lecturers and over 2,500 students. It is an academic and professional institution, part of Nottingham Trent University. Not to be confused with the School of Law at University of Nottingham. The institution specializes in different fields of education in law. Nottingham Law school's main goal is to provide their students careers that they are guaranteed after the completion of their graduation. The faculty of Nottingham Law School was known for developing and creating the Legal Practice Course that includes the training and schooling of law designed courses that deal with the actuality of the legal system, demonstrating the different skills required for indulging with law in the year of 1990s. With the development of the new designed course, the professors and teachers of the Nottingham Law School decided to take the initiative of enrolling more students into the program. The law school also took the stance on initiating part-time students into the course, as well as raising the number of seats in the course for students enrolled in full-time study. Also, Nottingham Law School participated in running the Law Society Final Examination with a number of 150 students enrolled in the course. The Law School has been given the top 'Excellent' rating by the Law Society and comparable ratings by the Bar Standards Board of England and Wales every year since its inception. It also has a significant reputation for research, particularly in insolvency and international criminal justice, with 60% being judged as of international standard in the most recent 2008 Research Assessment Exercise. Since 1977, Nottingham Law School has also produced its own annual law journal; the Nottingham Law Journal.
The Nottingham Law School has been accredited for being one of the nine universities that provides courses in the assistance of the Bar exam, that has been known as the Bar Professional Training Course. Nottingham Law School has an capacity of 120 students for the Bar Professional Training Course approved by the Bar Standards Board.
Legal Practice Course
The Legal Practice Course offers three different routes: the standard, the commercial and the corporate. It further provides 7 specialties, from which students can register and choose the top 2 of which field they desire. These specialties are the following: "corporate finance, commercial law, advanced litigation, employment, commercial leases, family, and client in the community." The Nottingham Law School provides different groups of meetings to help the student with certain skills, and support in assisting the students practice the different skills, and activities. The Legal Practice Course supports their students in providing them accurate real life problems related to the field law, in which the students have to indulge in solving matters, through demonstrating their vast skills learned from the credible teachers and staff of the faculty of law. The duration of the course meetings varies according to the choice of the students enrolled in full-time study. Students of Nottingham Law School registered in the Legal Practice Course have to commit to 13 days of concentrated studying, regardless of whether it is at home or at the workplace.
The law school also hosts the Legal Advice Centre at Nottingham Law School. Founded in 2006 as the Legal Advice Clinic, the centre experienced growth threefold by the year 2012 and reopened as the Legal Advice Centre in 2014 with a purpose-built suite in the University's Chaucer building. The centre provides free legal advice on a number of areas, including debt, housing and employment law. Advice is generally given by Nottingham Law School students on a pro bono basis, with the centre aiming to "give law students a flying start to their legal career". The centre also houses the Nottingham office of the Free Representation Unit.