Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Lol the dude went to Yale Law. Be serious.
Are you saying that David Bois couldn't possibly be dyslexic because he went to Yale Law?
I suggest you educate yourself in dyslexia. Start with anything by Sally Shaywitz (Audrey G. Ratner Professor in Learning Development at Yale University and Co-Founder and Co-Director of the Yale Center for Dyslexia & Creativity).
No, I’m suggesting that Bois went to a traditional and highly ranked law school, not some lame school. So the example is irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Lol the dude went to Yale Law. Be serious.
Are you saying that David Bois couldn't possibly be dyslexic because he went to Yale Law?
I suggest you educate yourself in dyslexia. Start with anything by Sally Shaywitz (Audrey G. Ratner Professor in Learning Development at Yale University and Co-Founder and Co-Director of the Yale Center for Dyslexia & Creativity).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Lol the dude went to Yale Law. Be serious.
Are you saying that David Bois couldn't possibly be dyslexic because he went to Yale Law?
I suggest you educate yourself in dyslexia. Start with anything by Sally Shaywitz (Audrey G. Ratner Professor in Learning Development at Yale University and Co-Founder and Co-Director of the Yale Center for Dyslexia & Creativity).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Lol the dude went to Yale Law. Be serious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Lol the dude went to Yale Law. Be serious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
I don’t know. David Bois is dyslexic. He somehow made it work. I know several other dyslexic lawyers. Most tend toward litigation but not all.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know the answer to this, so it's not meant to be judgmental. But, would someone who required a different learning style for law school be able to work effectively once they graduated and were looking for a job? At some point, don't people find a good match for themselves in terms of career where they can succeed without looking for alternative learning styles? I don't know anything about law so and I also don't know what accommodations OP is looking for - OP just got me wondering and maybe attorneys and/or parents of young adults that needed special learning styles for graduate programs can chime in.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Northeastern LwnSchool used to hve a co-op program. Not sure if that still exists now that Northeastern is more popular.
It's unclear what a co-op program would add over normal summer associate programs.