Graduates of ABA-accredited universities cannot practice law in the state until passing the Florida Bar examination and becoming licensed. And despite those eligibility requirements remaining incomplete for several years and as previously discussed, the Florida Board of Bar Examiners advises first-year law students complete a student registration early in their first year of law school. The Board, a judicial arm of the Supreme Court of Florida conducts matters of bar admission, offers a special student registration to first-year law students through its Registrant Bar Application at a substantial fee reduction. If postponed, applicants henceforth delay the required background investigation, eventually incur higher registration fees and just might exclude themselves from eligibility for externship programs during their tenure at the college. Delayed long enough and scheduling the bar examination itself also comes into question.
Providing complete accuracy for the Registrant Bar Application could not be more vital. In fact, it may take several weeks just to assemble all of the required information, including one’s domicile, work history, academic records and any
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In Florida, all practicing attorneys must be members of the Florida Bar Association. And although several exceptions exist, generally speaking, the practice of law remains prohibited without initially becoming and maintaining membership in good standing with the Florida Bar. Responsibility for admittance to the Florida Bar Association occurs through an administrative agency of the Florida Supreme Court known as the Florida Board of Bar Examiners – the same group administering the General Bar Examination. To attain licensure for practicing law, a candidate must have graduated from an ABA-accredited college of law, undergone a background investigation, pass the Florida Bar examination, and become certified by the Supreme Court of