It depends — in many jurisdictions you can earn CLE credit for teaching or presenting a CLE-approved program, but only if the program is accredited and your jurisdiction’s rules allow “teaching credit.” Often credit is limited to actual instruction time (excluding preparation) under specified formulas.
Details & Examples:
- New York: An attorney may receive credit for speaking or teaching at an accredited CLE program (e.g. 3 hours of credit for each 50 minutes of instruction) but cannot claim additional credit for preparation time.
- New Jersey: Its CLE FAQ states attorneys teaching or presenting courses accredited in another mandatory-CLE jurisdiction may earn credit (subject to rules).
- American Bar / general: Many jurisdictions recognize teaching, panel participation, law school courses, or writing as “other means” of earning CLE credit, subject to caps or rules.
- California: Under MCLE rules, providers may include “teaching time” in approved educational activities if the teaching meets accreditation criteria.
Common Conditions / Limitations:
- The course or program must be accredited or approved by your jurisdiction’s CLE authority.
- Credit is typically allowed only for the actual teaching or presentation time (not preparation), often under a multiplier or formula.
- Some states cap how much teaching credit you can receive in a reporting period.
- If you repeat the same presentation without substantial new content, credit may be restricted or disallowed.
- Keep thorough documentation (agenda, faculty list, time breakdowns, program brochure, certificate) to support your claim.
Key Takeaway
Yes — you can often earn CLE credit for teaching a CLE-approved program, but only under your jurisdiction’s teaching credit rules (approved program, qualifying instruction time, and documentation).