Anonymous wrote:OP here.
It should be legal because it is from state government, and has been there for years. No school credit for my DC. Possible for others, I don’t know. It does let applicants to specify how many hours you are available. But based on previous interns, you have to be full time, or else no chance. So mine has put down 40hr/wk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College freshmen, very hard to get a summer intern.
Which one is better? A paid part time job in retail, 20hr/wk, but nothing to do with her major. Or an unpaid volunteer in circuit court, 40hr/wk. Will the later help law school application?
40 hours a week and she won't get paid a dime?
Jesus Christ!
That should be illegal.
If she wants to be a full-time volunteer, and your family is in a financial position to allow it, she should do it somewhere that actually makes a difference in the world like St. Jude's. Not some circuit court.
This IS illegal if the internship is at a for-profit firm. They will be breaking minimum wage laws.
If the internship is with gov't agency or a non-profit, it's legal. I'd see if it would be possible to do the internship part time (3 days in the office for about 25 hours?) and also do the paid part time job.
Anonymous wrote:Unpaid internship. Mostly so she can see if being a lawyer is really what she wants to do. It can be a grind.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College freshmen, very hard to get a summer intern.
Which one is better? A paid part time job in retail, 20hr/wk, but nothing to do with her major. Or an unpaid volunteer in circuit court, 40hr/wk. Will the later help law school application?
Take the unpaid court internship, make money on weekends mowing lawns or other labor jobs, or be tutor for high school students for SAT, ACT, college apps. Both kids we know at HLS did similar their fresh and sophomore summers, building to prestigious judicial internship in DC after junior year.
Are you talking about freshmen and sophomore years in law school or college? Never heard big firms hire college students not law student, even if intern.
Anonymous wrote:Look into any options at your college that will fund students who work unpaid internships. DD's college has a fund that pays up to $5k per student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:College freshmen, very hard to get a summer intern.
Which one is better? A paid part time job in retail, 20hr/wk, but nothing to do with her major. Or an unpaid volunteer in circuit court, 40hr/wk. Will the later help law school application?
Take the unpaid court internship, make money on weekends mowing lawns or other labor jobs, or be tutor for high school students for SAT, ACT, college apps. Both kids we know at HLS did similar their fresh and sophomore summers, building to prestigious judicial internship in DC after junior year.