-
Clerkship may
refer to: Law Law
clerk - a law
student or
recent law
graduate who
practices law
under the
guidance of a
judge or
licensed attorney. a clerk...
-
Clinical clerkships encomp**** a
period of
medical education in
which students – medical, nursing, dental, or
otherwise –
practice medicine under the supervision...
-
interested candidates apply for
federal clerkships more than a year
before the
clerkship begins. The
federal clerkship application process has also largely...
-
articled clerk. The
articled clerk signs a contract,
known as "articles of
clerkship",
committing to a
fixed period of employment. Wharton's Law
Lexicon defines...
- "ultimate achievement."
Feeder clerkships are, consequently,
similarly prized as
stepping stones to a
potential clerkship with the
Supreme Court. Justices...
- A data
entry clerk, also
known as data
preparation and
control operator, data
registration and
control operator, and data
preparation and registration...
-
formal apprenticeship or
clerkship program was
established first in New York in 1730 — at that time a seven-year
clerkship was required, and in 1756...
-
throughout America. APGO's UMEC
identifies the
third year of
residency or "
clerkship" as an
ideal time to
institute education if it has not
already occurred...
- Not
continued by Mary I "By 31
March 1553
Thomas had
surrendered the
clerkship" -
Dakota L. Hamilton, ‘Thomas,
William (d. 1554)’,
Oxford Dictionary...
-
graduates attaining federal judicial clerkships in 2020. and
seventh in
graduates attaining Supreme Court clerkships. The
School of
Architecture was established...