Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
If it's true you have to be honest and disclose. Why lie on an application when they ask for all degrees your parent has and their job? They can find out from linkedin.
A JD for someone who is practicing could help or signal full pay. How about for someone not currently practicing?
say retired.
I said stay at home parent and listed my JD and masters. I guess this signals full pay as well. Husband is big law partner.
Retired sounds better than SAHP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
If it's true you have to be honest and disclose. Why lie on an application when they ask for all degrees your parent has and their job? They can find out from linkedin.
A JD for someone who is practicing could help or signal full pay. How about for someone not currently practicing?
say retired.
I said stay at home parent and listed my JD and masters. I guess this signals full pay as well. Husband is big law partner.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
If it's true you have to be honest and disclose. Why lie on an application when they ask for all degrees your parent has and their job? They can find out from linkedin.
A JD for someone who is practicing could help or signal full pay. How about for someone not currently practicing?
say retired.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
If it's true you have to be honest and disclose. Why lie on an application when they ask for all degrees your parent has and their job? They can find out from linkedin.
A JD for someone who is practicing could help or signal full pay. How about for someone not currently practicing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I are both lawyers. Had our kids wanted to become lawyers, we'd still have listed it but we would also have recognized that we did not do our job as parents.
Why? Because your kid wants to be an attorney? Why would you not want that?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
If it's true you have to be honest and disclose. Why lie on an application when they ask for all degrees your parent has and their job? They can find out from linkedin.
Anonymous wrote:Is it better not to include it so reviewers and AOs are not like "ugh, an attorney parent" (regardless if you currently practice)?
Anonymous wrote:My spouse and I are both lawyers. Had our kids wanted to become lawyers, we'd still have listed it but we would also have recognized that we did not do our job as parents.
Anonymous wrote:I have a JD and am an attorney. I listed it without even thinking about it for kid #1 and will do the same for my younger kids. I think you're overthinking this OP!
Anonymous wrote:This is a strange question. Why would you hide that? Also, the common app asks you to list parents' employers, which also signals profession (maybe not definitively, but likely).