yes they do but only for 3 years
Technically, lawyers do not need an internship or apprenticeship, but there is such thing as bar admission course and articling that you need to complete after you graduate from law school. Articling is working under an experienced lawyer's supervision for ten months. Some would consider that to be somewhat of an apprenticeship....
Many frontier lawyers in 18th century America elected to read the law, an apprenticeship of sorts, in lieu of attending college.
Yes as do black lawyers, Hispanic lawyers, Catholic lawyers, Hindu lawyers, Muslim lawyers, Irish lawyers, Italian lawyers, Greek lawyers, Polish lawyers, Native American lawyers, male lawyers, female lawyers, transgender lawyers, gay lawyers, straight lawyers, agnostic lawyers, vegetarian lawyers, vegan lawyers,
The stage that typically comes after apprenticeship is journeyman. At this stage, individuals are considered skilled and experienced in their craft and can work independently. It is a step towards becoming a master in certain trades.
Slaves were property and had no relationship with an apprenticeship. The apprenticeship was a contract for 7 years of work in a area of trade.
There are family lawyers, real-estate lawyers, criminal lawyers, corporate lawyers, divorce lawyers, accident lawyers, debt settlement lawyers, Personal Injury lawyers, Bankkruptcy lawyers, Traffic lawyers, and Immigration lawyers.
Yes. Example: "The apprenticeship was given to the aspiring intern."
what intrests you in completing an apprenticeship
National Apprenticeship Act happened in 1937.
National Apprenticeship Service's motto is 'Apprenticeships'.
National Apprenticeship Service was created in 2009.
Wilhelm Meister's Apprenticeship was created in 1795.