Anonymous wrote:I have worked as a legal secretary, and ended up doing paralegal work
Anonymous wrote:Oh my gosh, please think twice about going to law school bc your parents want it. It is an awful lot of time, work and money if you aren't that into it. Hell, even if you are that into it.
Anonymous wrote:I didn't study for the LSAT at all...not one minute of prep. Did fine. Went to state law school (applied to both state schools, got into both, went to the better one).
Question: why do you want to go to law school, and how will you pay for it?
Please don't go because your parents want you to go. While law schoo wasn't difficult for me, it is a big commitment. And it's expensive unless you go to state school. If you have to take out loans, please reconsider. The job market is tight. Please don't assume you will graduate and get a six figure job...that's highly unlikely unless you are top of your class, graduate from a top tier one school, and aren't as old as I think you might be (nobody wants to hire older second-career folks).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - Will your parents pay for law school? Will you support yourself for the next 3 years?
My parents are divorced. Father will pay for some but I will have to take out a good amount of loans.
Then take longer and study more so you get a good score. It's so not worth taking out loans unless you can get into a top school. The employment stats coming out of second tier law schools are abysmal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Take a practice test and see how you do. If you score above a 160 without any practice, you may be able to raise your score by a few points in a month to make you competitive.
Since you were a philosophy major, I assume you took your fair share of logic courses, so the part that stumps a lot of people may be easy for you.
It's really about learning how to take it. When I took my first practice test, I scored 157. After a Kaplan course, I scored 175. That's a big jump, obviously. I am a happy and successful lawyer today.
That said, I would not recommend going to law school unless it's what you want to do, not what your parents think you should do.
MarleySkye840 wrote:Op, I'm not going to tell you that you shouldn't be a lawyer if that is what you want. However, the fact that you started this off with "my parents said..." kind of shows that you don't totally have your heart into this. It seems like something that you are going in to just because your parents think it would be good for you. You are probably very smart, and could make it as a lawyer, but if that isn't what you want to do, you are going to hate every minute of it, and resent your parents for it.
-parents planned for me to be a lawyer since I was 2, I decided that wasn't for me at 16. They understood, and got over it.
Anonymous wrote:Over the holidays both parents sat me down and spoke to me about that they would like me to go to law school, that they think I have a natural propensity for it. I have worked as a legal secretary, and ended up doing paralegal work, and was a philosophy major. Even though I hadn't wanted to go in the past, their words made sense and now I am interested in attending.