Anonymous wrote:You might try Physician's Assistant OP. It doesn't take long and people do almost everything a MD does.
Anonymous wrote:medicine is tough just because of the LOOOONG training track. I know someone who tried at 40 and didn't make it. took the prereqs, blew the lid off the MCATs and still couldn't get a medschool to accept her. They were pretty frank, for the most part, that medical school + residency is really pretty much a minimum of 6 years, likely more. if she made it through, she would likely only practice for 10-15 years or less. that makes it a hard sell for the student AND the school. they don't get to train but so many people and prefer to train people who are going to work for another 30 years after they finish training. my friend did some research and a LOT of soul-searching and became a nurse. She likes it!
anyway, career tracks with shorter runways are a better bet than medicine. plenty of people make late life switches. I know a few second-career teachers, and LOTS of people who switched tracks within law to do something totally different, an English professor who became a PA, a finance guy who started a food truck, a journalist who went into PR, etc. Like the PP, I imagine your best bet would be to reinvent your law career. There are lots of ways to be a lawyer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your law school accepted 60 yr olds and retired MDs?? Mine did not have a single one of either of those. The 60 yr olds on campus looking for entertainment were auditing undergrad art history.?
Yep, every class at my law school had a couple of these (or similar). I suspect this is not the norm at the top law schools just because of the competitiveness of admissions. But at a mid-level state-style university or a night program, this is not uncommon -- from a law school admissions perspective it totally makes sense, these folks likely have higher than mean GPA and LSAT scores, pay full tuition, and aren't going to report unemployment following graduation, if nothing else, it boosts their ranking in the all important US News scores. Law schools don't constrain the supply of graduates like medical schools so there's no "we have to hold our spots for people who will practice" like med school. I found law school pretty interesting, so I can see the appeal...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Your law school accepted 60 yr olds and retired MDs?? Mine did not have a single one of either of those. The 60 yr olds on campus looking for entertainment were auditing undergrad art history.?
Yep, every class at my law school had a couple of these (or similar). I suspect this is not the norm at the top law schools just because of the competitiveness of admissions. But at a mid-level state-style university or a night program, this is not uncommon -- from a law school admissions perspective it totally makes sense, these folks likely have higher than mean GPA and LSAT scores, pay full tuition, and aren't going to report unemployment following graduation, if nothing else, it boosts their ranking in the all important US News scores. Law schools don't constrain the supply of graduates like medical schools so there's no "we have to hold our spots for people who will practice" like med school. I found law school pretty interesting, so I can see the appeal...
Anonymous wrote:
Your law school accepted 60 yr olds and retired MDs?? Mine did not have a single one of either of those. The 60 yr olds on campus looking for entertainment were auditing undergrad art history.?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:medicine is tough just because of the LOOOONG training track. I know someone who tried at 40 and didn't make it. took the prereqs, blew the lid off the MCATs and still couldn't get a medschool to accept her. They were pretty frank, for the most part, that medical school + residency is really pretty much a minimum of 6 years, likely more. if she made it through, she would likely only practice for 10-15 years or less. that makes it a hard sell for the student AND the school. they don't get to train but so many people and prefer to train people who are going to work for another 30 years after they finish training. my friend did some research and a LOT of soul-searching and became a nurse. She likes it!
anyway, career tracks with shorter runways are a better bet than medicine. plenty of people make late life switches. I know a few second-career teachers, and LOTS of people who switched tracks within law to do something totally different, an English professor who became a PA, a finance guy who started a food truck, a journalist who went into PR, etc. Like the PP, I imagine your best bet would be to reinvent your law career. There are lots of ways to be a lawyer.
This is interesting... law school classes have been known to have 60 year old+ half-retired physicians in them (mine had 2) that just want to do some expert testimony or just felt like going to school to entertain themselves or whatever. You think the reciprocal arrangment would be more welcoming..
I was not a lawyer but I worked full time while taking nursing school pre-reqs then also full time during nursing school. I went to a community college nursing program that was well regarded in the area but offered the flexibility my family needed (Saturday classes). Granted my full time job didn't have the stress or long hours notoriously lawyers have, but still it was a lot since I also had a newborn when I started nursing school. You can do anything you put your mind to.Anonymous wrote:Yes, my friend went from law to nursing at 40. She saved up a ton to pay off her law school loans and be able to pay for nursing school debt-free, and also took night classes to get the pre-reqs done (while practicing law). It was intense but she's very happy now. I think it's relevant that she was single at the time; it was hard but it would have been impossible with kids, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:medicine is tough just because of the LOOOONG training track. I know someone who tried at 40 and didn't make it. took the prereqs, blew the lid off the MCATs and still couldn't get a medschool to accept her. They were pretty frank, for the most part, that medical school + residency is really pretty much a minimum of 6 years, likely more. if she made it through, she would likely only practice for 10-15 years or less. that makes it a hard sell for the student AND the school. they don't get to train but so many people and prefer to train people who are going to work for another 30 years after they finish training. my friend did some research and a LOT of soul-searching and became a nurse. She likes it!
anyway, career tracks with shorter runways are a better bet than medicine. plenty of people make late life switches. I know a few second-career teachers, and LOTS of people who switched tracks within law to do something totally different, an English professor who became a PA, a finance guy who started a food truck, a journalist who went into PR, etc. Like the PP, I imagine your best bet would be to reinvent your law career. There are lots of ways to be a lawyer.