Anonymous wrote:I got a job as a legal secretary at Holland and Knight back in the late 90s, with just a BA from a top college. I did it with a plan to do it for 1 year, while I applied to law school. I was technically underemployed, but I’m glad I did it.
Turns out I hated lawyering or at least what I saw of it; most of the lawyers seemed miserable. Even the senior ones.
I went after that and got an entry level job in sales and marketing after that and then got an mba. Have had a successful corporate career but am VERY glad I dodged the lawyer/ law school bullet by trying it first.
Anonymous wrote:I got a paralegal job for a big DC-based firm straight out of college. It was easy. I wrote directly to an attorney that I wanted to work for (very niche area) and she hired me. There were a dozen others at the firm in the same situation. All of us just trying to explore law before committing to law school. I ended up opting for a different path, because I found out it wasn't for me. Great use of a year instead of diving straight in.
My son has just submitted his law school applications and has the stats and other qualifications for a T14 law school. He has been planning to defer for 1-2 years in order to get some real world experience. He has just started setting up informational conversations with a few attorneys to get advice. But in looking for litigation paralegal positions in DC, what he is seeing is the requirement to have 5-10 years experience first.
Is this just the AI impact? Where are all the entry level jobs? Is there seasonal hiring? Have those vanished? Do law firms now want only career paralegals? DC's internships during his college years have all been law-related, but are nonprofit and state governmental experiences.
Thanks for advice!
Anonymous wrote:I got a paralegal job for a big DC-based firm straight out of college. It was easy. I wrote directly to an attorney that I wanted to work for (very niche area) and she hired me. There were a dozen others at the firm in the same situation. All of us just trying to explore law before committing to law school. I ended up opting for a different path, because I found out it wasn't for me. Great use of a year instead of diving straight in.
My son has just submitted his law school applications and has the stats and other qualifications for a T14 law school. He has been planning to defer for 1-2 years in order to get some real world experience. He has just started setting up informational conversations with a few attorneys to get advice. But in looking for litigation paralegal positions in DC, [i]what he is seeing is the requirement to have 5-10 years experience first.
Is this just the AI impact? Where are all the entry level jobs? Is there seasonal hiring? Have those vanished? Do law firms now want only career paralegals? DC's internships during his college years have all been law-related, but are nonprofit and state governmental experiences.
Thanks for advice!
Anonymous wrote:If he can get into top schools now, why wait to attend? Is the real world experience so that he can decide if he wants to go? I think it would be better to go right to school and then get experience as an actual attorney (the pay will be more too). I don’t think one year as a paralegal really tells you what it is like to be a lawyer. There are so many different types of positions.
Anonymous wrote:If he can get into top schools now, why wait to attend? Is the real world experience so that he can decide if he wants to go? I think it would be better to go right to school and then get experience as an actual attorney (the pay will be more too). I don’t think one year as a paralegal really tells you what it is like to be a lawyer. There are so many different types of positions.