Anonymous wrote:DC just went through the admissions cycle, with multiple T14 offers. My sense is that a cohesive narrative matters, but that it is a much less holistic process than undergrad admission can be -- the median GPA and LSAT of each school are very important markers of a candidate's competitiveness.
Summer jobs can matter in terms of:
(1) how they fit in with the overall narrative of how the applicant came to be interested in law -- the content should be consistent with the applicant's story, but does not need to be in any particular domain.
(2) will the experience help make the applicant competitive for first jobs in the future -- the hiring cycle has shifted to starting much earlier, so the pre-law school experience is more important now (hence the increased penalty for KJDs). A year or more of full-time employment post BA/BS is a real asset.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DOJ internship two summers, volunteer community organization with leadership summers and semesters, with leadership; different community work summer, with impact; worked with local law enforcement during the semester--professor connection. LSAT above 170, Harvard law.
And apply from Mississippi, Alabama, Arkansas, or a Dakota.
Anonymous wrote:^also 3.93 from an ivy.
Anonymous wrote:DOJ internship two summers, volunteer community organization with leadership summers and semesters, with leadership; different community work summer, with impact; worked with local law enforcement during the semester--professor connection. LSAT above 170, Harvard law.
Anonymous wrote:I don't think a summer job matters very much for law school admissions. It might help a tiny bit for getting a job while in law school, but again, that is largely based on grades. If they can somehow get something remotely related to law for that summer, it can't hurt. But I wouldn't stress if they can't.
Anonymous wrote:I studied abroad my junior year and travelled for 8 weeks in Africa for shits and giggles. I was admitted to three T14 schools. I honestly don't think an applicant's summer job is that important, although it's possible that things have changed since I went to law school. Nor, after nearly two decades of practice in big law and government, do I think that T14 is the golden ticket many believe it to be.