I teach at CalArts and we switched our editing curriculum over to Avid two 
years ago from FCP 7, mainly because FCP X and Premiere were not satisfactory 
for our workflows, including working with flex files and cut lists for 16mm 
editing (though animation students learn Premiere to integrate with After 
Effects). We still have FCP 7 installed for those who haven't made the 
transition, but it's getting harder for the tech people to maintain, as it 
conflicts with newer versions of QuickTime and other software, so they may be 
bailing on it next year.

While each of the current NLEs have their plusses and minuses and we'd rather 
not have technology be an inhibiting factor in our students'  creative 
evolution, as Adam mentioned previously, Avid still provides more opportunities 
for employment in post-production here in Los Angeles, where I am seeing those 
companies who were reluctant to give up FCP 7 for the past couple of years, 
finally making the switch to Avid (even independent documentary productions). 

Best,

Laura Kraning
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