Objective

To provide the legal knowledge and skills necessary for an entry-level employment in the operation of legal and business environments. To provide a detailed understanding of law and legal procedures in rendering direct assistance to lawyers engaged in legal research.

Job Outlook

Paralegals and legal assistants are projected to grow faster than average for all occupations through 2012. Some employment growth stems from law firms and other employers with legal staffs increasingly hiring paralegals to lower the cost and increase the availability and efficiency of legal services. The majority of job openings for paralegals in the future will be new jobs created by employment growth, but additional job openings will arise as people leave the occupation. Despite projections of fast employment growth, competition for jobs should continue as many people seek to go into this profession; however, highly skilled, formally trained paralegals have excellent employment potential.

 

Nature of Work

 

While lawyers assume ultimate responsibility for legal work, they often delegate many of their tasks to paralegals. In fact, paralegals—also called legal assistants—continue to assume a growing range of tasks in the Nation’s legal offices and perform many of the same tasks as lawyers. Nevertheless, they are still explicitly prohibited from carrying out duties which are considered to be the practice of law, such as setting legal fees, giving legal advice, and presenting cases in court.

One of a paralegal’s most important tasks is helping lawyers prepare for closings, hearings, trials, and corporate meetings. Paralegals investigate the facts of cases and ensure that all relevant information is considered. They also identify appropriate laws, judicial decisions, legal articles, and other materials that are relevant to assigned cases. After they analyze and organize the information, paralegals may prepare written reports that attorneys use in determining how cases should be handled. Should attorneys decide to file lawsuits on behalf of clients, paralegals may help prepare the legal arguments, draft pleadings and motions to be filed with the court, obtain affidavits, and assist attorneys during trials. Paralegals also organize and track files of all important case documents and make them available and easily accessible to attorneys.

In addition to this preparatory work, paralegals also perform a number of other vital functions. For example, they help draft contracts, mortgages, separation agreements, and trust instruments. They also may assist in preparing tax returns and planning estates. Some paralegals coordinate the activities of other law office employees and maintain financial office records. Various additional tasks may differ, depending on the employer.

 

Employment

You must have communications skills for effective interaction with members of the legal business community. Entry level employment as Legal Assistant in these and other institutions as:

  • Trust Officers, Probate & Pension    Specialist, Escrow Officers
  • Real Estate Mortgage Specialist
  • Collection Specialist, Litigation Specialist
  • Corporation Paralegal/Legal Assistants, Industrial Relations, Labor Relations Specialist
  • Insurance Claims Adjuster

 

Employment Key Points

 

  • While some paralegals train on the job, employers increasingly prefer graduates of postsecondary paralegal education programs; college graduates who have taken some paralegal courses are especially in demand in some markets.
  • Paralegals are projected to grow faster than average, as law offices try to reduce costs by assigning them tasks formerly carried out by lawyers.
  • Paralegals are employed by law firms, corporate legal departments, and various government offices and they may specialize in many different areas of the law.

 

For information on the Certified Legal Assistant exam, schools that offer training programs in a specific State, and standards and guidelines for paralegals, contact:

 

  • National Association of Legal Assistants, Inc., 1516 South Boston St., Suite 200, Tulsa, OK 74119. Internet: http://www.nala.org/

 

General information on a career as a paralegal can be obtained from:

 

  • Standing Committee on Legal Assistants, American Bar Association, 541 N. Fairbanks Ct,., Chicago, IL 60611. Internet: http://www.abanet.org/