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The Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC)

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The Bar Professional Training Course (BPTC) is an important step on the way to becoming a barrister, fulfilling the vocational element of Bar training. During a one-year, full-time course you’ll learn practical skills and gain knowledge of procedure, as well as attending sessions with your Inn of Court. If you want to become a barrister in England and Wales, you’ll need to take the Bar Professional Training Course. It’s a qualification designed to build on the academic knowledge gained during an undergraduate Law degree or Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL), preparing you for pupillage at the Bar.

Course Topics

A typical BPTC syllabus will cover the following compulsory topics, along with two optional specialized subject areas:

  • Advocacy
  • Civil litigation and evidence
  • Conference skills
  • Criminal litigation, evidence and sentencing
  • Dispute resolution
  • Drafting
  • Opinion writing
  • Professional ethics

In addition, you’ll need to complete 12 qualifying sessions at your Inn of Court before being called to the Bar. These qualifying sessions are a chance to network with practising barristers, attend lectures given by legal experts and take part in training sessions. BPTCs and Inns of Court also provide students with an opportunity to engage in extracurricular activities to boost their CV, such as Mooting, Pro bono work, Debating, Mock trials.

Duration

 If you study the BPTC on a full-time basis, the course is one year long. However, several providers offer a part-time BPTC, which takes two years to complete.

Entry Requirements

  • A qualifying Law degree at 2:1 or above
  • A non-Law degree at 2:1 or above, plus a Graduate Diploma in Law (GDL)
  • IELTS – a score of 6.5 in all four areas
  • Pearsons academic – a score of 58 in four areas

You should also be a member of one of the four Inns of Court by the time the course begins. Extra-curricular experience – such as a mini-pupillage or a placement – will be beneficial to your BPTC application. In addition, you’ll need to pass the Bar Course Aptitude Test (BCAT), which is an exam administered by the Bar Standards Board (the regulatory body for barristers in England and Wales). This costs £150 to sit. You can be accepted onto a BPTC prior to passing the BCAT, but you must pass the test before beginning the BPTC itself. The BCAT can be taken at test centres in over 100 countries. It’s a good idea to schedule taking the test fairly early in the application process in case you need to retake it (places at test centres can fill up quickly, particularly when the deadline is approaching). The BCAT doesn’t require any specific legal knowledge – instead, it will test your critical thinking and reasoning skills. The current pass score is 45.

Assessment Methods

You’ll be assessed in several different ways over the course of the BPTC. For the civil litigation and criminal litigation elements of the programme, you’ll take two three-hour multiple choice exams administered by the Bar Standards Board. Other subjects – compulsory and optional – are assessed via a combination of open and closed book written tests, as well as oral examinations.