Anonymous wrote:High Point U, the life skillz university.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top SLAC
Any SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by great writer? A novelist, or just someone who is able to write a grammatically correct email, Power Point presentation, or business plan? IMO, the best way to become a good writer is to read a lot.
OP here
Yes, fair question.....
DC, a HS junior, wants to pursue a career in law or business. So in that sense.
Such a silly question for someone interested in law or business. If you want to pursue a career in law, get top grades in a good school and score well on the LSAT while majoring in whatever you want. If writing is a big deal to you, major in English or philosophy. If you want a career in business, go to a school with a good B-school.
No, not a silly question. Being a good writer as an attorney is a must. Being a great writer as an attorney puts you head and shoulders above. Anything that puts you in that second category is a HUGE plus.
And being a great writer in business, coupled with very good quantitative skills, makes you stratospheric.
Being a good LEGAL writer is a must. There are plenty of generically good writers who can't write like lawyers to save their lives. You need to understand the difference.
The question is can being a good writer helps you to be a good legal writer?
Yes, obviously. Legal writing is not that hard, IMO. You're quoting a lot of case law and rules to prove your argument.
the only undergraduate class that really helped me in this regard was symbolic logic because it made me thing about the structure of arguments. Law schools have writing classes and legal writing really doesn't have too much in common with writing for a history or philosophy class. I think if you wrote a history paper in the same format as a legal memo you'd probably get an F
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by great writer? A novelist, or just someone who is able to write a grammatically correct email, Power Point presentation, or business plan? IMO, the best way to become a good writer is to read a lot.
OP here
Yes, fair question.....
DC, a HS junior, wants to pursue a career in law or business. So in that sense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Top SLAC
Any SLAC.
Anonymous wrote:Top SLAC
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do you mean by great writer? A novelist, or just someone who is able to write a grammatically correct email, Power Point presentation, or business plan? IMO, the best way to become a good writer is to read a lot.
OP here
Yes, fair question.....
DC, a HS junior, wants to pursue a career in law or business. So in that sense.
Well, according to DH none of his firm's new legal associates can write. So, presumably it is learned on the job.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
No, not a silly question. Being a good writer as an attorney is a must. Being a great writer as an attorney puts you head and shoulders above. Anything that puts you in that second category is a HUGE plus.
And being a great writer in business, coupled with very good quantitative skills, makes you stratospheric.
Being a good LEGAL writer is a must. There are plenty of generically good writers who can't write like lawyers to save their lives. You need to understand the difference.
The question is can being a good writer helps you to be a good legal writer?
Anonymous wrote:Kenyon
Anonymous wrote:Denison