There is absolutely no way she would be hired at the IRS. Her grades are awful. |
Can the career office at her law school help? |
Not OP, are I referring to the teaching fellows programs? |
Yes. Getting an entry level federal job at certain agencies is very, very difficult. |
Pass the bar and be willing to go anywhere in the country for the first job. |
You pass the bar in a particular state so you can't then go anywhere in the country for a job. |
I'm a state government lawyer and we have several JDs that work in my agency, program and compliance officers. I assume they do not have a bar by they do not refer to themselves as lawyers, but as JDs. |
The contracting officers and specialist in my agency are not very smart. Most do not fundamentally understand contracting. We have a few law grads working as specialist and they are much better than the old timers with no education that have been working here for 20plus years. If she has a grad degree then the minimum GPA requirements are waived. She will need to get past the vets though. |
You're the moron. The USPTO has patent examiners as well, who do not have law degrees. |
OP, it sounds like your niece unfortunately has wrecked her life. 300k in debt from a crappy school and unable to pass the bar means that she is unlikely to ever be a lawyer; if she does get a job as an attorney, it will likely be at a "shitlaw" firm making 40-50k and no benefits. she can't service her debt on that.
i actually agree with the posters who suggested leaving the country and defaulting on the loans. i don't see how she can ever, ever pay off this debt. |
I wish you the best of luck and hope you get the job. But you should definitely remember that an interview is NOT a job offer. I'm an attorney and just started a new job a month ago. They interviewed 12 people and then brought 3 back for second round interviews. That means that 11 people who interviewed, but didn't get the job. Also, there's a difference between failing the bar once and three times. She now has a 1 1/2 gap on her resume between graduation and now. The legal market in this area is brutal and the competition is incredibly stiff. I think niece needs to look into other fields and I wholeheartedly agree with you that she needs to get any kind of job she can find right now. |
But they do have to have a bachelor's degree in a science/tech field: http://www.uspto.gov/web/offices/pac/exam.htm |
There is no way she's be hired at my former crappy agency either- and we're a lot less selective than the IRS. |
something doesn't add up here. you went to a lower tier 1 and graduated below median, then failed the bar, and you got a market-paying (i.e., 160k in NY/DC or 140k-ish in a secondary city)? by networking? if this is true, you basically won the lottery. congrats. |
I used to work for a company in DC called Aspen Systems that did legal document coding. A lot of the employees had law degrees, but did not practice. she could also become a paralegal. |