Anonymous wrote:It used to be that accounting and econ majors did the best in law school grade wise but not sure if it is still true. Still, the law sucks and law school is a disappointment. Don’t go.
Signed,
Happily making 7 figures without ever having practiced!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm the pp who studied theater; I easily got into my top choice ls, and am now a tax attorney.
It doesn't matter what she majors in. The folks mentioning poli sci or history as pre-law majors are giving old info--nowadays I would avoid those majors unless she really loves one of them; people are still majoring in them thinking it will "be good for law school" so the applicant pool is flooded with them. I think that is part of what they liked about me -- my performing arts major was a bit different.
But she should pursue whatever interests her, and if that is marketing, it's fine.
What matters are grades and LSAT score, and if she can do any volunteering in the legal field that might be good too (I had volunteered a bit in the field of wrongful convictions -- the movie Dead Man Walking is what inspired me to go to law school).
Did you study somewhere like Yale though, for Drama? I can't see anyone getting into Law from some podunk SLAC with drama.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the pp who studied theater; I easily got into my top choice ls, and am now a tax attorney.
It doesn't matter what she majors in. The folks mentioning poli sci or history as pre-law majors are giving old info--nowadays I would avoid those majors unless she really loves one of them; people are still majoring in them thinking it will "be good for law school" so the applicant pool is flooded with them. I think that is part of what they liked about me -- my performing arts major was a bit different.
But she should pursue whatever interests her, and if that is marketing, it's fine.
What matters are grades and LSAT score, and if she can do any volunteering in the legal field that might be good too (I had volunteered a bit in the field of wrongful convictions -- the movie Dead Man Walking is what inspired me to go to law school).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone in my family is a lawyer. You can major in anything. Psychology, Spanish, drama, journalism, accounting, economics, English, art history, advertising, biology, computer science, etc.
+1
I was an accounting major and went to law school.
What kind of law do you do now?
Anonymous wrote:The best advice I got in college (knowing that I wanted to go to law school) was major in what you love so you’ll get the best possible grades. I did and majored in US History. Graduated with honors.
But here’s my advice (as a lawyer): only go to law school if you have a real PLAN for what you’re going to do with it, how you’re going to pay off your debt, etc. Don’t just expect that you’ll go work for a big firm and make partner and make lots of money and love it. That rarely happens. Have an alternative plan.
Or, truly, major in what you love, earn the great GPA, and then you’ll have tons of options for graduate school and career paths. Which may or may not include law school.
Anonymous wrote:A ton of attorneys major in Poli Sci. It's fine. I don't necessarily think it gives a leg up in admissions or in school other than she is more likely to understand certain aspects of Con Law and possibly Criminal Law but that's not worth determining a major. I would encourage her to major in something that translates to a career path should she not decide to go to law school.
- Attorney poli sci major
Anonymous wrote:Philosophy with an emphasis on logic could be helpful. But I had a theater major and everywhere that I applied loved that for some reason. So she should follow a passion if she has one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The one that gets you a 4.0.
And if STEM, so much the better.
Preferably EE or Comp E.
Or chem or biology, but only if your willing to get an MS too
Nope nope nope.
Anonymous wrote:The people I knew from law school who were most sought after and advanced the fastest where the ones with prior experience in the area they wanted to practice (the most niche, the better). The two I know who made partner first were a CPA coming from a big 4 who did tax law and a military contracting officer who went into government contracts. I'm sure Harvard and Yale were different, but at GW
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Philosophy with an emphasis on logic could be helpful. But I had a theater major and everywhere that I applied loved that for some reason. So she should follow a passion if she has one.
I have to ask Colin how do you know they “loved” it? Simply because they accepted you?