dissenting.
Respectfully, I must dissent.
This matter involves interpretation of SCR 2.070(2)(a) which provides:
(a) The attorney holds a J.D. Degree ... from a law school accredited in the jurisdiction where it exists and which requires the equivalent of a three-year *29course of study that is the substantial equivalent of the legal education provided by approved law schools located in Kentucky.
The qualifying words of art to be interpreted in this matter are “the substantial equivalent of the legal education provided by approved law schools located in Kentucky.”
This rule was specifically developed and promulgated to assist a limited class of persons: graduates of law schools not accredited by the ABA, who nonetheless are able to provide sufficient indicia of professional competence to be allowed to sit for the Kentucky Bar examination. That is, it is only fair and just that they should be afforded the opportunity to have their competence examined and evaluated. Applicant Troy Brooks, for the reasons outlined below, falls squarely within the ambit of the rule.
The phrase “substantial equivalent of the legal education provided by approved law schools located in Kentucky” is reasonably interpreted to mean that the applicant has taken the same required courses as would be taken by a student at an ABA-aeeredited school, has spent an equivalent or comparable number of hours in the classroom, has used the same or comparable law school textbooks, has passed substantive law examinations of reasonably equivalent difficulty, and can pass a standardized bar exam. I contend that this reading is the one most logically consistent with the language and intent of the rule.
However, the Board of Bar Examiners sees otherwise. It has interpreted the phrase “substantial equivalent” to mean that the law school be comparable in resources, physical facilities, and faculty. The emphasis on these criteria, remarkably similar to the ABA standards to which the rule itself was intended to provide an alternative, may be a convenient way of disposing of Mr. Brooks’ application, but fails entirely to address the ultimate and legitimate question: Is the graduate competent to sit for the Kentucky Bar Substantially equivalent more rationally relates to the content of knowledge and skills acquired by the applicant wishing to sit for the bar examination. examination?
The Kentucky Board of Bar Examiners engaged Consultant Jack Grosse, former Dean of Chase Law School, to evaluate the Nashville School of Law (NSL) pursuant to Mr. Brooks’ application. Dean Grosse subsequently filed a report upon which the Board based its decision. Using ABA standards, Dean Grosse paints a substandard picture of NSL. Yet, by virtue of his dependancy on ABA standards, Dean Grosse’s evaluation does not accord with the purpose or intent of the rule, nor does it fairly answer the question of whether Mr. Brooks received a “substantiality] equivalent” legal education, instead addressing only whether NSL possesses resources “substantially equivalent” to its accredited counterparts. To follow the Board’s evaluation calculus would be to make SCR 2.070(2)(a) an absurd tautology, which provides merely that a graduate from a law school which has not met the ABA standards for accreditation, may still sit for the Kentucky Bar examination, provided he establishes that his school satisfies the ABA standards for accreditation. This internal inconsistency, apparently lost on the Kentucky Board of Bar Examiners, should not elude this Court lest the rule be a hollow one.
Lawyer competence, in most if not all areas of legal practice, demands a wide range of fundamental skills including the ability to:
—analyze legal problems;
—perform legal research;
—collect and sort facts;
—write effectively (both in general and in a variety of specialized applications such as pleadings, briefs, contracts or wills);
—communicate orally with effectiveness in a variety of settings;
*30—perform tasks calling on both communications and interpersonal skills, such as:
(i) interviewing,
(ii) counseling,
(iii) negotiation;
—organize and manage legal work.
The report of former Dean Grosse simply does not address whether Troy Brooks has acquired any of these quantifiable and measurable skills, and thus it fails to satisfy the proper diagnostic function of SCR 2.070(2)(a). Like law school graduates from Vanderbilt University, University of Tennessee, and University of Memphis, Mr. Brooks has passed the same Tennessee Bar Examination. More importantly, he has successfully competed with graduates of hundreds of ABA-approved law schools in the Tennessee legal marketplace for more than five years. Under the Board of Bar Examiner’s interpretation of SCR 2.070(2)(a), an accomplished NSL graduate practicing law successfully for years in Nashville, Tennessee, would never be qualified for law practice a few miles away in Seottsville, Kentucky. It is irrational to have such a geographical distinction.
A brief digression is instructive to demonstrate the incompatibility between the Board’s reliance on the ABA standards in compiling its report and the intent of this Court in SCR 2.070(a)(2). Notably, the Board’s reliance on the standards signals its underlying assumption that the goals of the ABA in accrediting schools are identical to those envisioned by this Court in SCR 2.070(2)(a), namely, protecting the public from incompetent or unscrupulous attorneys. This assumption is dubious at best. Recent anti-trust litigation against the ABA, and numerous learned articles, have drawn attention to what may be less than altruistic forces at play behind the closed doors of that august organization. See Complaint, Massachusetts Sch. of Law v. American Bar Ass’n., No. 93-6206, at 1-2 (E.D.Pa.1993) (alleging that the ABA inflated faculty salaries, increased the cost of legal education, and prevented disadvantaged persons from obtaining a legal education). Many have joined in criticism of the ABA accreditation process, including the deans of fourteen law schools, incorporating Stanford, University of Chicago, and Harvard, who in an open letter to the deans of all accredited schools complained:
We find the current process overly intrusive, inflexible, concerned with details not relevant to school quality (perhaps even at odds with maintaining quality), and terribly costly in administrative time as well as actual dollar costs to schools. It is this sense of responsibility that gives rise to our concern that the accreditation process for law schools is heading in the wrong direction. Our varied visions of legal education focus on the results of the educational process, on the outputs of legal education. In contrast, the ABA’s accreditation process increasingly concentrates on the inputs — how many seats there are in the library, for example.
An Open Letter to Deans of the ABA. Accredited Law Schools, MSL L.Rev. Fall 1994, at 48, 49; see generally Andy Portin-ga, Note, ABA Accreditation of Law Schools: An Anti-Trust Analysis, 29 U.Mich.J.L.Ref. 635, 637 (1996). Additional questions about the ABA’s primary motivations in accreditation were also raised when, following a yearlong investigation, the Department of Justice (DOJ) filed suit against the ABA for antitrust violations. A consent decree effectively ended the suit, but under it the ABA agreed to make numerous changes, including reconstituting the accreditation teams, previously comprised primarily of law professors. Portinga, supra, at 638. Cf. Goldfarb v. Virginia State Bar, 421 U.S. 773, 95 S.Ct. 2004, 44 L.Ed.2d 572 (1975) (Court holding that despite state delegation of authority to bar associations, those associations are not immune from Sherman Act by state action). According to some, the degree of influence exerted by the ABA as gatekeeper to legal practice, evidenced by ABA *31accreditation prerequisites for bar examinations in 45 states, provides a tremendous incentive for the organization to both exaggerate fears of “fly-by-night law schools cheating unwary students” and “unfit and crooked lawyers abusing hapless clients,” and to misrepresent the efficacy of the accreditation system in warding against those evils. George B. Shepherd, William G. Shepherd, Scholarly Restraints? ABA Accreditation and Legal Education, 19 Cardozo L.Rev.2091, 2104 (1998).
Through decades of lobbying, the ABA has convinced most states to limit their bar examination to graduates of its accredited schools. Concern that the ABA system of accreditation may potentially be influenced by a self-serving attempt to restrict entry into the legal profession, or tainted by parties with vested interests in maintaining high costs for legal education, provides ample justification for a rule such as SCR 2.070(2)(a). The rule, properly applied, provides a valuable safeguard against possible abuses by refusing to abdicate entirely the gateway to legal practice in this state to an external, non-governmental body. Unfortunately, no meaningful distinction can exist where the state’s own mechanism of regulation seems beholden, as it does in this case, to standards perpetuated by the ABA.
The report issued by the Kentucky Board of Bar Examiners casts its decision that NSL does not offer a “substantial equivalent” of an approved Kentucky school by cataloging a score of ABA standards that, the Board alleges, the school fails to satisfy. These focus, almost without exception, on physical resources, administration, and faculty schedules. While these are important considerations for a student in selecting which school to attend, they are not necessarily probative of the substance of the education offered therein. Were Yale University to offer classes to interested students in a dank and moldy off-campus basement, and with a qualified part-time professor, I still strongly suspect that a motivated student could find an excellent education there. This possibility is virtually unimaginable according to the ABA paradigm, a paradigm which also, incidently, would have left Chief Justice John Marshall and countless other venerable jurists in our nation’s history out of work.
The “non-ABA” evaluation section of the Board’s report offers little more than a rewording and reprise of the ABA-based evaluation textually preceding it. Again, the focus is on a lack of full-time faculty, resources, and elective offerings. The report concedes that many matters pertinent to assessment could not be addressed without an on-site visit. Curiously, a cursory review of the materials provided by NSL (upon which Dean Grosse presumably based his evaluation) suggests answers to several of the questions the report left unresolved. For example, Dean Grosse’s speculation that NSL graduates fall short of the 1120 class hours required by the ABA, reveals an apparent unwillingness to do the necessary arithmetic. In fact, the NSL course catalogue indicates that in order to graduate, NSL students must complete a combination of twenty-four (24) required courses in classes of 22, 45, 65, 79, and 101 classroom hour increments, or, simply put, exactly 1120 hours of mandatory classes. These hours can then be supplemented by additional elective courses. Obviously, the required courses alone satisfy the ABA requirements, and even absent elective undertakings, the class hours are consistent with the requirements of many ABA-aecredited institutions.
“Substantially equivalent” does not mean “identical.” In this context it means having the capacity to produce the same result, namely a competent lawyer. There are, no doubt, many perceived inadequacies in the educational opportunities available at NSL when contrasted with institutions meeting the standards set by the American Bar Association, just as a continuum of advantages exist across ABA-accredited schools. NSL does not offer the *32elective course selection available at many schools; the law library is not extensive; there is no law review providing scholarly research and writing opportunities; the faculty is not engaged full-time in teaching or writing for scholarly journals; and student support services are not comprehensive. These, and perhaps other circumstances, will prevent a school such as NSL from ever being recognized as a great or distinguished school of law. Yet, this relative educational adversity must not, in an ostensibly meritoeraetic profession, constitute an impregnable barrier for the particularly self-motivated and tenacious student willing to work hard to acquire a solid legal education. I have no doubt that a student willing and able to surmount the deficiencies of such an environment can obtain, at least, a substantially equivalent education to that which all but the most academically inclined students receive at more distinguished law schools. Nor do I doubt that, by the same token, a tremendously expensive Ivy-league legal education can be frittered away by a student unwilling to truly earn it.
Additionally, it behooves this Court to remember, in assessing the probative value of the ABA standards as applied to a “substantial equivalen[cy]” analysis, that the opportunities vaunted in the accreditation process are, for the most part, available to a very limited number of students. The vast majority of graduates from ABA-accredited schools will not benefit from small group seminars, law reviews, clinical experience, and research assistance to faculty members. Seeing as most schools can provide these benefits to only a small subset of their students, usually the brightest and the luckiest, it seems counterintuitive to suggest that a school without them, by definition, is under-equipped to educate its student body.
NSL, in contrast, espouses a fundamentally different approach to legal training and serves a largely non-traditional student body. Practically all of the students at NSL are attending the four (4) year night program because they are gainfully employed. Many of them are simply unable, due to familial or other constraints, to forego three years income, and resign themselves to the albatross of debt that increasingly adorns the necks of the modern American law student. It is my understanding that many NSL students have jobs while in school that involve legal research, writing, and contact with the legal profession. They participate in moot court, both trial and appellate, which requires research and writing outside of the regular classroom work and provides “practical” training. The volumes in the NSL library are supplemented by computer research facilities and the availability of other law libraries in the area. The faculty members of NSL, while less published in academic journals and treatises, tend to do their research and writing for actual clients, or, in the case of members of the judiciary, for their courts. I have ample reason to believe that they take their teaching responsibilities seriously and that their status as part-time faculty is a reflection on the non-traditional composition and orientation of the school, not on the quality of their instruction. In the materials provided the Board by NSL, twenty-three of the thirty-four well-credentialed professors were reported to have been with the school for 10 years or longer. The majority of them are drawn from the ranks of legal professionals, including judges and prominent attorneys, and to suggest that they have less to impart than full-time academics reveals the bias inherent in the ABA standards.
NSL provides an affordable, practicum-oriented alternative for the study and practice of law. While some ABA-accredited schools expressly eschew practical legal instruction in favor of its sublimated, abstract forms, NSL offers a nuts and bolts approach to the mechanics of the law affordably. It does not have the resources for courses on defending baby seals in court, surfing pornography web sites, or entertainment law focusing on lotteries *33and gambling. Rebecca Luczydki, Roll Over Socrates, Unusual Law Courses on the Rise, The Nat’l Jurist, Nov. 1999 at 13.
In law school, I acquired skills in analysis, research, and communication. However, my finest instructor was not a professor but rather the late Francis T. Goheen, with whom I started law practice in 1964. Further, three years of law school did not compare in educational value with the understanding of law which matured during my one year clerkship with this Court. The practice of law is so necessarily broad that no one system of teaching it, neither Dean Langdell’s nor Dean Loser’s, has yet been developed that adequately encompasses all of its facets. Until such a system is perfected, legal academics and professionals truly interested in fairness and excellence, would be advised to honestly assess new models of imparting legal knowledge.
Apparently, Troy L. Brooks was a good, but not exceptional, student and it seems unlikely that he would have been afforded the opportunities provided by law review, practice clinics, etc., had he attended an accredited institution. Like many “B” students at accredited schools, these opportunities would likely have eluded Mr. Brooks. Though NSL offers a relatively inexpensive program geared toward working people who may not have the luxury of a traditional legal education, it could not do so for long were it forced to adopt the costly trappings so seemingly inseparable from ABA accreditation.
It is debatable whether the faculty, library facilities and extra-curricula programs that exist at Kentucky law schools generally provide a more effective legal education than is offered by NSL. Graduates of NSL do have a substantially lower bar examination passage rate than Kentucky graduates and this is noteworthy. However, should the future of select, highly-motivated but disadvantaged students be evaluated on aspects of their schools not clearly correlated to acquiring a satisfactory legal education, or should these graduates be considered on other criteria reflective of their personal merit? In order for SCR 2.070(2)(a) to have any discernible distinction from the law that preceded it, the latter approach must be followed. Substantial equivalency must be divined from the quality of the respective student’s knowledge, not the institution’s amenities. To do otherwise is to unfairly deprive worthy students, who for a variety of reasons must opt for a non-traditional legal education, of the opportunity to practice law in Kentucky.
A rigorous Bar examination is but one screen to protect the legal consumer; numerous other informal and, arguably, more effective safeguards exist which are constantly shaping the composition of the legal profession. Market forces, including obtaining and retaining employment, financing a practice and building a satisfactory reputation, together with means of legal redress1 against unworthy lawyers, all operate to weed out bad seeds. See Christopher T. Cunniffe, The Case for the Alternative Third-Year Program, 61 Alb. L.Rev. 85 (1997). Therefore, given the extra protections in place, I can see no principled reason why this Court should stand idly by while an influential professional organization imposes, with the complicity of the state bar examiners, another patently suspect restriction.
The ABA has had too much control over decisions affecting access to the study of law. As a result, the dominant model of American legal education has become one in which students are taught how to argue aggressively, with no quarter given or taken, and how to fight an opposing viewpoint with uncompromising technical skill. Fewer than 4% of American law schools require their students to take even one hour of training in negotiation as part of their learned skills.
As I favor a more relative open access to the bar, I would afford the applicant an *34opportunity to take the Kentucky Bar Examination.
LAMBERT, C.J., joins this dissent.
. For example, malpractice actions; ethics reviews; criminal sanctions.