by Ganesh Sahathevan
In the words of the NSW Legal Profession Admission Board:
PLT was designed as a bridge between completion of a law degree and entering legal practice, originally to replace articles. PLT is no longer fit for purpose.
https://lnkd.in/gcx6i_B5
It is good that the NSW LPAB has finally determined that which has been obvious for a very long time.
Students, graduates entitled to a refund of fees from the College,and the senior managers responsible for promoting an obviously flawed course.
TO BE READ WITH
TO BE READ WITH
Saturday, February 8, 2025
Will College Of Law PLT standards continue to be determined by novelist Adrian Deans, and will PLT work experience continue to be judged not by the quality of the work experience, but by the quality of the reflection of the work experience , as described by Lewis Patrick, Chief Academic Director College Of Law
by Ganesh Sahathevan
Mr Adrian Deans
The College's PLT work experience component is overseen by Adrian Dean, a novelist who does not appear to have much exposure to legal practise.
This writer has had the experience of submitting a work experience journal to Deans, while enrolled as a PLT student at the College. The conclusion of this writer's work experience recorded in the journal was that the College taught little if anything that was applicable in actual legal practise.

Mr Lewis Patrick
Lewis Patrick , Chief Academic Officer and Deputy CEO at College of Law (COL) , has also resigned as a director of COL's UK venture, the College Of Legal Practise Ltd (COLP) . He joins Nick Savage, COLP's high profile CEO, whose resignation was reported on this blog yesterday.
The reasons for now two high profile departures are unknown; the College and in particular its CEO Neville Carter operate under a code of secrecy and have refused to answer queries about their operations.
However, its foreign misadventures, especially in Malaysia, are now a matter of public record. Despite these public revelations the College has refused to clarify matters; CEO Carter has in fact gone so far as to portray the Malaysian experience as a plus in promoting the College's expansion into the UK.
A similar venture in Singapore also seems to have run into problems.
It is left to be seen how the UK market reacts to the College's uniquely Antipodean methods of instruction in legal training. For example, in his capacity as Academic Director Patrick once famously declared that in assessing the work experience component of the Practical Legal Training (PLT) course that the College Of Law conducts in Australia " the College is not assessing the quality of (the student's) work experience, but rather the quality of (the student's) reflections on that experience.
In fact, the College's Director in charge of the PLT's work experience component is one Adrian Deans, who in the past decade has become better known as a novelist.
