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Also, something like entertainment law is incredibly saturated, b/c it's seen as a "glamorous" job. Only a few people go into law school with a very particular type of law in mind that they want to practice. They'll likely change their minds. It's not really good to limit yourself also when the job market is tight. There's not many jobs at all starting out in entertainment law, if any. People that practice it sorta made their way there through various routes. People ask me what kind of law I want to practice in, and honestly, i'm VERY flexible and open to ideas. I have to be, or else i'll be on the street in a cardboard box pretty soon :) |
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He graduates next year and he had a hard time getting an internship nonetheless a job because there are so many law school students looking for a summer internship! |
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good deal i quickly put that out of my mind in my plans after undergrad. |
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Law school applications have been WAYYYY up the past few years, and there's more attorneys entering the field that their are leaving it. Not only does that make job placement hard, but just getting into law school, even in the "lower" tiered schools, MUCH more difficult. |
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i won't lie, though....i though getting my masters was hella easy. |
Basically, I guess, the moral to this story, there is no way in h-e-double L I'll be getting into law school. Is this what I am hearing or am I hearing it correctly? (BTW I am not being defensive or sarcastic . . . just getting a bit of info).
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depends on your abilities. and the market. |
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ETA: It's called the Executive-in-Training program. Maybe talk to your human resources department about it? Also, I'd look at the when the career fairs are at the local colleges. It would be a good chance to meet some companies that are looking for entry-level candidates. |
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If you've got crappy grades, if you pulled off a very solid LSAT you could probably get in SOMEWHERE, but that doesn't mean that you should go there. Going to a lower-reputation law school isn't going to help you get a job in one of the bigger cities, at all. There's the issue of getting into law school, then there's the issue of whether or not you could get the job of your dreams or on the way to your dreams after... I get the impression that you're not really sure what the heck you want to do. For those reasons, I'd strongly advise you to take some time and work and figure out what you want to do. Don't go wasting money or time on something that's not right for you and not going to give you what you want. Law school's a HUGE investment, both time and money ($85K for me! and I had some scholarship money and live in a lower cost of living area), and you shouldn't do it if you're not sure. |
Charlotte School of Law will have its inaugural class in the Fall of 2006.
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ETA: need to page GeekyPenguin to this thread as she just went through the process this year |
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As for her finding a job outside of the area -- depending on what she decides to do, it's just a matter of her passing the bar and getting that initial experience. I get the impression she wants to stay local for the time being anyways. Our office manager/paralegal at work is waiting for Charlotte's law school to open simply for the fact that she needs to possess a law degree to sit for the bar. She has a job waiting for her, so she doesn't need or care to go to a top-tier law school. |
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If you end up in a situation like that, it's great, but if not, I honestly wouldn't advise it unless it's a last ditch sort of thing. |
Can you go there for say, a year, and transfer to an ABA-accredited school so you can take the bar anywhere? That might be a good idea for me?
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