A CLE course is bar-approved when the jurisdiction’s CLE authority formally grants it accreditation, certifying that it meets defined standards of content, format, instructor qualifications, and record-keeping. This ensures that attorneys who complete the course may count the credited hours toward their mandatory CLE or MCLE obligations in that jurisdiction.
The CLE authority (often a State Bar, Supreme Court commission, or MCLE Board) evaluates each program under criteria specified in its rules or regulations before granting approval. Some jurisdictions also require the provider to be an accredited CLE sponsor.
What jurisdictions typically require
- A written submission or application describing the course agenda, learning objectives, and faculty credentials.
- Verification that the subject matter is relevant to legal practice (substantive law, ethics, skills, procedure).
- Compliance with format rules (live, webinar, distance learning, recorded media) as allowed by the jurisdiction’s regulations.
- Instructors must meet qualification standards (e.g., attorneys, judges, subject-matter experts).
- Adequate record keeping: attendance logs, assessment of participation, certificate issuance, and retention of documentation for audit.
- A requirement to report the credit to the jurisdiction’s CLE tracking system.
Variations by jurisdiction
- Some states grant sponsor accreditation, meaning once a provider is approved, its courses are automatically pre-approved for a period.
- Other states evaluate each individual course regardless of who provides it.
- Some jurisdictions reject courses intended for marketing, advocacy, or sales, or those teaching non-legal skills not tied to law practice.
Compliance note
Attorneys must verify that a particular CLE course is approved for credit in their jurisdiction before relying on it to satisfy their requirement. Accredited providers, including Sprout Education, design programs to conform to each jurisdiction’s accreditation standards and report credits for compliance.
Key Takeaway
A course becomes bar-approved only after the jurisdiction’s CLE authority certifies that it meets all content, format, instructor, and administrative standards; attorneys must always confirm approval in their jurisdiction before counting the credit.