Anonymous wrote:To the PP with an MS in Legal Studies (whatever that is): I've been a lawyer for 20 years, and have worked at 2 very well known Big Law firms, and am now a partner. Your description of a paralegal "career" exists in Fairyland. Most of our best paralegals are bright young college grads who are trying to decide whether to go to law school (or are wisely saving up to do so). 200K a year? Advising clients? Hardly.
Anonymous wrote:If you are organized and smart, paralegal is Much smarter career choice than lawyer right now.
I don't agree that being a paralegal wouldd be a smart choice for everyone that wants to be an attorney. A good paralegal is organized, self-motivated, and detail-oriented. I am a pretty good attorney and would be a terrible paralegal. I am not organized at all - my paralegal helps me with that . You need the right skill set for any job.
Anonymous wrote:I think it depends on what you want out of it. I didn't go to a top tier school (but did go to school in D.C.) I graduated with nearly 200K in debt. I got a job with the feds and got on the income based repayment plan. My loan payments are managable (under $300 a month) and in 8.5 more years the government will forgive my debt (under the public service forgiveness plan). My entire reason to go to law school was to always work for the Feds (although I am not at teh agency I originally wanted to be at). Still, I enjoy my life now and I am happy with the education I got and the friends I made. So for me it worked out (I graduated in 2009).
If one is planning to go to law school becuase they think it is an easy way to make money then I wouldn't go. I also tend to say that if you can't get into a top tier school or aren't offered a good scholarship at a lower school it might not be worth it financially, but again I didn't do either of those things and I think it was still worth it for me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:"give legal advise"
The irony drippeth.
Really....please share where in my post I gave "legal advise"....that is, applied legal knowledge to a specific fact pattern. All I did was share my experiences working with lots of attorneys. Some loved practicing. Some absolutely hated it and regretted their decision. I merely offered an alternative. If he loves the law, there are other ways to work in the legal field.
Are you kidding?[/quote]
LOL I wondered the same thing . . .

Anonymous wrote:
This is the kind of nonsense you hear ONLY in this area. Personally, I know four lawyers who went to their state university law school and are hugely succesful in their home state. As for your question, unless his heart is really into this, then I would think no he shouldn't go to law school. There are a lot of unemployed lawyers from "top tier" law schools. He might do better getting a Masters in something that will be a better fit for public policy. In any case $90,000 is a lot of debt to start out one's working life and I would pay that off before getting deeper in debt..
You hear this here because this area is so saturated with lawyers, and employers have their pick and will cross prospects off the list if they did not attend a top tier school. Perhaps in Idaho there aren't a whole lot of Harvard Law grads vying for legal jobs there, so state schools will suffice, but not here.
Your friends who are doing well with JDs from state universities - how did they do in law school? Law review & top of the class, or just average, middle-of-the-pack? And which states are you referring to? Someone would really need to be a superstar coming out of U of Miami to get a good job in any major market right now, and I'm not sure OP's brother is going to be that kind of a superstar.
Gerry Spence from Univ. of Wyoming is one and he didn't even pass the bar his first try.
If you are organized and smart, paralegal is Much smarter career choice than lawyer right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Gerry Spence from Univ. of Wyoming is one and he didn't even pass the bar his first try.
Um, try to keep up. Gerry Spence graduated from law school in the 1950s. His experience isn't relevant to today's prospective law students in any way, and that's what many posters are trying to convey -- the legal market has suffered unprecedcented contraction in the past three years, while law schools graduate more and more lawyers with unheard of debt loads.
Anonymous wrote:To the PP with an MS in Legal Studies (whatever that is): I've been a lawyer for 20 years, and have worked at 2 very well known Big Law firms, and am now a partner. Your description of a paralegal "career" exists in Fairyland. Most of our best paralegals are bright young college grads who are trying to decide whether to go to law school (or are wisely saving up to do so). 200K a year? Advising clients? Hardly.