2026
updated
NFPA promotes paralegals through what program - ANSWER-Cle (training after
legal training)
Can entry level paras be on the nfpa - ANSWER-No
Who can be in the nfpa - ANSWER-People certified in pace or rp
Nala - ANSWER-Certification. Exam for paralegals with no training
Who are the ones who pass the nala called - ANSWER-Cp- certified paralegal or
a cla- certified legal assistant
What is a paralegal called when they meet the nala requirements - ANSWER-
Acp- advanced certified paralegal
Does nala or nepa require entry level certification - ANSWER-Nala
Voluntary association of attorneys. It's a standing committee on paralegals thst
recutes paralegals - ANSWER-Aba
A para hi is an employee of an attorney - ANSWER-Traditional para
A para who operates on his or her own buisness and contracts to do work for
others who do not control many of the administrative details of how the work
is preformed - ANSWER-Independent contractor
, Paralegal Exam 1 fully solved &
2026
updated
Type of paralegal that provides assurance to attorneys whose clients are
engaged in a large variety of transactions involved in leases, contracts, and
estate planning - ANSWER-Transactional paralegal
Type of paralegal who provides services for an attorney who represents clients
in transactions for businesses or closing a real estate - ANSWER-Transactional
paralegal
Conduct by a person who does not have a license to practice law or other
special authorization needed for that conduct - ANSWER-Upl
Non clerical tasks that require legal expirence or training tasks that justify an
award of paralegal fees - ANSWER-Substantive legal work
Paralegal fee - ANSWER-Fee that attorneys collect for the non clerical work of
his or her paralegal on a client case
Overhead fees - ANSWER-Operating expenses of a buisness for which
customers or clients charge a separate fee
American rule - ANSWER-Winning party can not recover attorney fees from the
losing party
English rule - ANSWER-Losing team must pay the winners attorneys fee
Fee shifting - ANSWER-Process of forcing one party to pay another's attorney
fees and costs in litigation