Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I will say OP, is that the ranking of the school you attend matters. Period. You will need to think long and hard about attending any program outside of the top 10 nationally. People will share their success stories and ... good for them! I was one of them. But it is horrible to see more than half of my graduate class toiling away in temporary or low paying positions (and I went to a top 30 school!). At my school, if you were not in the top 30% of the class at the end of 1L year, law firms would not even *interview* you. Hard cutoff. It's atrocious. To think that some of these people had families.![]()
I agree. Brand very much matters, and not just for your first job. There is a ridiculous level of elitism in law -- and not just in BigLaw, but also in the non-profit world. I'm almost 20 years out and I still see it.
This is definitely true in the DC area. If you're interested in non-East Coast cities, this is definitely not the case. BigLaw branches is places like Atlanta, Dallas, Miami, KC, etc. are much less picky about the school and tend to hire many grads from law schools in their region.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All I will say OP, is that the ranking of the school you attend matters. Period. You will need to think long and hard about attending any program outside of the top 10 nationally. People will share their success stories and ... good for them! I was one of them. But it is horrible to see more than half of my graduate class toiling away in temporary or low paying positions (and I went to a top 30 school!). At my school, if you were not in the top 30% of the class at the end of 1L year, law firms would not even *interview* you. Hard cutoff. It's atrocious. To think that some of these people had families.![]()
I agree. Brand very much matters, and not just for your first job. There is a ridiculous level of elitism in law -- and not just in BigLaw, but also in the non-profit world. I'm almost 20 years out and I still see it.
Anonymous wrote:All I will say OP, is that the ranking of the school you attend matters. Period. You will need to think long and hard about attending any program outside of the top 10 nationally. People will share their success stories and ... good for them! I was one of them. But it is horrible to see more than half of my graduate class toiling away in temporary or low paying positions (and I went to a top 30 school!). At my school, if you were not in the top 30% of the class at the end of 1L year, law firms would not even *interview* you. Hard cutoff. It's atrocious. To think that some of these people had families.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Started at age 30. Ended up clerking for a Supreme Court Justice. Now enjoying non Big Law practice and being a parent who is active and present in DCs' lives. You can do anything with law review at a top 10 law school, circuit clerkship from a feeder judge, a Supreme Court clerkship and 6 figure signing bonus.
Few minor edits to make it more accurate.
+1. There are literally thousands of attorneys in DC doing document reviews on a contract basis, 4 weeks here, 6 weeks there, barely making a living. And all the ones I know went to good and even top 20 law schools, some even with great law firm e perience who lost jobs during the recession and never recovered. The profession has changed dramatically since the recession, and a decrease in full time jobs is one of the changes that is only going to continue thanks to computers and artificial intelligence. I'm a 53 year old lawyer who really likes my job but there is no way I'd be going to law school now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Started at age 30. Ended up clerking for a Supreme Court Justice. Now enjoying non Big Law practice and being a parent who is active and present in DCs' lives. You can do anything with a law degree.
Please don't tell people this. You are breathing rarefied air that does not apply to anyone else. It's like the law version of "If they don't have bread, then let them eat cake!" (Even for SC clerks, it's not really true. I'm married to one and I probably know you since it's such a frickin' small world.)
For most people, taking out that much money to go to law school is not a good investment.
For OP, it may be, given that there's a clear career path and the employer will pay half. If it's half at a state school like George Mason, that's probably even better. (Half at Georgetown is still a lot of coin). But part-time evening law school is looooong slog, and with little kids at home, I think it would be really, really tough. Will employer make you pay them back if you can't finish? Will employer give you time off so you can take some day classes? Can you study during the day at work? If the answers are yes, no, and no, then I think I would NOT do it.
Anonymous wrote:I am an over 50, equity partner in large global firm. Don't do it. The entire sector is a racket operated for the benefit of established incumbents only.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Started at age 30. Ended up clerking for a Supreme Court Justice. Now enjoying non Big Law practice and being a parent who is active and present in DCs' lives. You can do anything with law review at a top 10 law school, circuit clerkship from a feeder judge, a Supreme Court clerkship and 6 figure signing bonus.
Few minor edits to make it more accurate.
Anonymous wrote:Started at age 30. Ended up clerking for a Supreme Court Justice. Now enjoying non Big Law practice and being a parent who is active and present in DCs' lives. You can do anything with law review at a top 10 law school, circuit clerkship from a feeder judge, a Supreme Court clerkship and 6 figure signing bonus.