The Bar Professional Training Course (Bar Vocational Course or BVC prior to the 2010-2011 academic year) is a graduate course that is completed by those wishing to be called to the Bar, i.e. to practise as a barrister in England and Wales. The ten institutes that run the BPTC along with the four Inns of Court are often collectively referred to as 'Bar School'.
This vocational stage is the second of the three stages of legal education, the first being the academic stage and the third being the practical stage, i.e. pupillage. No person can practise as a barrister unless she or he has successfully completed this course.[1]
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Entry requirements
Although the minimum entry requirements for the BPTC is a qualifying law degree with no less than lower second class (2:2) honours, or a degree in another subject with no less than 2:2 honours in addition to a pass in the Common Professional Examination (CPE), applicants for the BPTC should demonstrate a strong academic profile (preferably upper Second Class Honours degree and above from a leading university and excellent extracurricular activities). Additionally, a suitable candidate should provide strong evidence of a commitment to the English Bar.
In 2006:[2]
- 3,227 students applied for the BVC,
- 1,932 received a place,
- 1,425 passed the BVC,
- 598 received pupillage,
- 544 received tenancy.
As a result of the apparent over-supply of barristers, the Bar Standards Board recently considered four controversial proposals:
- Capping the number of BPTC places
- Deferring call till the completion of pupillage
- Raising the minimum entry standards to a 2:1 degree (implemented into some BPTC offering institutions)
- Mandating a minimum IELTS score of 7.5/9 for foreign students (implemented into some BPTC offering institutions)
As of 2008, only two of these proposals have been able to find enough support to be implemented.
Fees for the BPTC are now between £8000 and £15000, making the course a serious investment for future barristers. There are many avenues to fund the course, whether via a professional studies loan[3] or the various Inn scholarships[3] given out each year.
Course options
The course bridges the gap between academic study and the practical work of a barrister by teaching subjects with which a practising barrister will need to be familiar with. Core modules include:
- Criminal Advocacy
- Civil Advocacy
- Drafting
- Opinion Writing
- Client Conferencing
- Alternative Dispute Resolution
- Criminal Litigation and Sentencing
- Civil Litigation and Evidence
- Professional Conduct and Ethics
- Two optional modules (these vary from institute to institute)
Grading
Students successfully completing the course may be awarded the overall grade of “Outstanding”, “Very Competent” or “Competent”.
- To gain the award of “Outstanding” a candidate must have passed all assessments at the first attempt and must achieve either an overall mark of 85% or above, or six or more grades in the outstanding category.
- To gain the award of “Very Competent” a candidate must have failed no more than one assessment at the first attempt and must achieve either an overall mark 70% or eight or more grades in the very competent or outstanding categories.
- To gain the award of “Competent” a candidate must pass each assessment subject to the rules governing the opportunity to re-sit.
Providers
| Institution | Location | Circuit | Approx. course fees |
|---|---|---|---|
| BPP Law School | London | South Eastern | £14,500 |
| BPP Law School | Leeds | North Eastern | £11,500 |
| University of the West of England | Bristol | Western | £10,300 |
| Cardiff University | Cardiff | Wales and Chester | £8,500 |
| Nottingham Trent University | Nottingham | Midland Circuit | £10,950 |
| The College of Law | London | South Eastern | £12,930 |
| The College of Law | Birmingham | Midland Circuit | £10,500 |
| City University (formerly ICSL) | London | South Eastern | £14,500 |
| Manchester Metropolitan University | Manchester | Northern | £8,950 |
| Northumbria University | Newcastle upon Tyne | North Eastern | £9,155 |
References
- ^ Adam Kramer (2007). Bewigged and Bewildered: Pupillage and a Career at the Bar. Hart Publishing. ISBN 1841136514.
- ^ Statistics
- ^ a b http://www.allaboutlaw.co.uk/index.php/courses/bptc-bvc/
See also
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




