Sometimes — university-hosted CLEs can be accredited, but only if the university (or program) obtains approval under the applicable jurisdiction’s CLE accreditation rules. Simply being hosted by a university does not guarantee accreditation.
Here’s how it works:
- Provider approval required: In jurisdictions like California, the State Bar is the only entity authorized to approve CLE providers and activities, so a university must register or apply to be an approved provider or have its program approved.
- Course-by-course approval: Even without full provider status, a university could submit individual courses or programs for accreditation (if the state’s rules allow) — Columbia Law School, for example, handles CLE accreditation for programs hosted by their law school.
- Quality and content standards: To gain accreditation, the university’s CLE program must meet standards such as relevant legal subject matter, instructional quality, interactivity (where required), and documentation of attendance.
- Jurisdictional variability: Different states have different rules; in some states, provider status or accreditation is tightly controlled and cannot be delegated, meaning some university programs may not qualify unless they comply with the state’s CLE rules.
Key Takeaway
Yes — university-hosted CLE programs can be accredited, but only if the offering meets the jurisdiction’s CLE accreditation rules (provider status, course approval, content standards). Universities should apply to the local CLE authority to secure accreditation.