Assessing Communication Skills in Legal Education
Kato Bukenya T.
Faculty of Business and Management Kampala International University Uganda
ABSTRACT
Communication is an indispensable facet of legal practice, integral to interviewing, advocacy, negotiation, and client relations. Despite its centrality, legal education has historically underemphasized communication training, particularly nonverbal and contextual communication, within curricula dominated by doctrinal instruction. This paper critically examines the multifaceted challenges and evolving methodologies in assessing communication skills among law students. Drawing on comparative models, pedagogical theory, and empirical case studies, it highlights the inconsistencies in defining, teaching, and evaluating communicative competence in legal training. It proposes a recalibrated model of assessment that integrates verbal and nonverbal communication, leverages technology, and fosters reflective learning through feedback mechanisms. The study underscores the need for a robust, context-sensitive, and formative approach to communication skill assessment to prepare law graduates for the complexities of modern legal practice.
Keywords: Legal education, Communication skills, Nonverbal communication, Curriculum design, Assessment tools, Professional competence.
CITE AS: Kato Bukenya T. (2025). Assessing Communication Skills in Legal Education. RESEARCH INVENTION JOURNAL OF LAW, COMMUNICATION AND LANGUAGES 5(2):1-7. https://doi.org/10.59298/RIJLCL/2025/521700