Anonymous wrote:People will say there's no such thing as pre-law or getting into a top law school, but the reality is that certain elite colleges graduate way more into the top law schools than UMD or William And Mary. W&M may get slightly more nods from ADCOMs for its amazing American History department.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save your money for law school and go to whichever of these is in-state.
+1 This is the correct answer.
Or better yet, skip law school altogether. DH is a lawyer, we know tons of lawyers, and none of them would advise their child to follow suit. Not one.
Why not?
DP, but I'm a lawyer and am advising my kids not to do it unless they will be litigators like I am. Lots of law firms are really investing in AI and the need for attorneys to draft anything, legal research, review contracts, etc. is all going to disappear in a few years. There won't be any reason for firms to hire associates to do the work that AI can do faster, cheaper, and with no errors. The AI isn't there yet, but given the advancements that are happening at a pretty fast pace, the only safe practice areas in 5+ years will those that have an in-person element.
Anonymous wrote:Save your money for law school and go to whichever of these is in-state.
Anonymous wrote:People will say there's no such thing as pre-law or getting into a top law school, but the reality is that certain elite colleges graduate way more into the top law schools than UMD or William And Mary. W&M may get slightly more nods from ADCOMs for its amazing American History department.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save your money for law school and go to whichever of these is in-state.
+1 This is the correct answer.
Or better yet, skip law school altogether. DH is a lawyer, we know tons of lawyers, and none of them would advise their child to follow suit. Not one.
Why not?
Anonymous wrote:Where did your DC decide to go?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Save your money for law school and go to whichever of these is in-state.
+1 This is the correct answer.
Or better yet, skip law school altogether. DH is a lawyer, we know tons of lawyers, and none of them would advise their child to follow suit. Not one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a W&M grad and went to a top law school so may be biased but I think W&M does an excellent job of preparing its graduates for law school. Strong writing curriculum, and I also found the philosophy courses helpful for critical thinking skills. I’d pick W&M over UMD because you can get a more personalized pre-law educational experience.
UMD is a far better pre-law school than WM. Just because you went to WM years ago doesn't mean you have a clue.
Anonymous wrote:Law schools admissions is largely about LSAT and GPA. They don't really care where you attended. It is a really just a tie breaker.
W&M doesn't have grade deflation. They have grade inflation like pretty much all selective schools and a relatively high average GPA above 3.5.
But if your kid is comfortable at UMD and does well, it will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a W&M grad and went to a top law school so may be biased but I think W&M does an excellent job of preparing its graduates for law school. Strong writing curriculum, and I also found the philosophy courses helpful for critical thinking skills. I’d pick W&M over UMD because you can get a more personalized pre-law educational experience.