This blog is a companion to our book, Law School Survival Manual: From LSAT to Bar Exam, which is designed to help you survive every part of the law school process, from choosing a school through graduating and taking the bar.
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Saturday, November 27, 2010
We swear: this post is the last one for today....
But for those potential law students out there, please read this post (here) before deciding whether -- and where -- to apply. Both of us happen to be glad to have gone to law school, but we went with our eyes open, and we want you to do the same.
And, of course, there's always this cartoon to distract you from studying (or make you depressed)....
Forwarded to us by NBR's dad. See here.
A distraction from your studies--and a point about your careers.
See this post, describing the always interesting (and, to me, pretty much always correct) Bill Henderson's take on the current job market (here).
Thursday, November 18, 2010
Note to future law students: as you start thinking about which law schools you like....
Don't rely too heavily on the U.S. News rankings. Here are some stories highlighting how those rankings can be gamed: see here and here.
Although we aren't fans of any ranking system that implies real differences among schools that are basically equivalent, we do think that you should pay attention to three factors:
1. Even though placement percentages can be gamed, you should still care not only about whether you can get a job after graduation, but where that school tends to place its graduates. See here for some sobering information.
2. It's hard to get a law job if you can't pass the bar. Pay attention to a school's bar passage rate.
3. Not too long after you get your J.D., you'll have to start repaying any loans that you've taken out. Realize that the higher your debt load, the fewer job choices you may have--and realize that not all law grads get high-paying jobs. See here. (And virtually all loans are non-dischargeable in bankruptcy: see here.)
So, as you're sorting out those schools to which you plan to apply, pay attention to data points that will matter to you. How fewer than 700 people rate your school, based on returning a survey, shouldn't be the top reason (see here).
Although we aren't fans of any ranking system that implies real differences among schools that are basically equivalent, we do think that you should pay attention to three factors:
1. Even though placement percentages can be gamed, you should still care not only about whether you can get a job after graduation, but where that school tends to place its graduates. See here for some sobering information.
2. It's hard to get a law job if you can't pass the bar. Pay attention to a school's bar passage rate.
3. Not too long after you get your J.D., you'll have to start repaying any loans that you've taken out. Realize that the higher your debt load, the fewer job choices you may have--and realize that not all law grads get high-paying jobs. See here. (And virtually all loans are non-dischargeable in bankruptcy: see here.)
So, as you're sorting out those schools to which you plan to apply, pay attention to data points that will matter to you. How fewer than 700 people rate your school, based on returning a survey, shouldn't be the top reason (see here).
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