Anonymous wrote:So, you have a strong urge to be an attorney, you're in the later stages of your working career and you've decided to rely on an anonymous message board about universities for guidance? Seems better than speaking with, I dunno, Public Defender's offices, lawyer, law firms.
Anonymous wrote:No. You never know when knowing the law can be useful if not personally maybe you can help your kids or a grandkid later with legal questions if they decide to do the same program
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you have the money, energy and patience for it, sure! But I’d be very realistic about what you might be able to do after graduating and (hopefully) passing the bar exam. Public defense is very demanding with high case loads and criminal litigation is stressful.
I work in legal aid and we had a volunteer that graduated from law school in her 70s. She had been an accountant for 30+ years and wanted to challenge herself. She sat for the bar three times and never passed, then gave up. She was still a great volunteer but never did become an attorney as she’d hoped.
If you’re interested in criminal justice issues, maybe you can complete some type of certificate program and get involved with advocacy work. Would be much less stressful than trying to enter the legal profession at that stage of life.
Good luck, whatever you decide!
Did that woman regret law school?
Anonymous wrote:I have a strong urge to study law and become a criminal law attorney. I'm in D.C. which has several law schools, with at least one (Catholic) having a night school. Yes? No?
Anonymous wrote:If you have the money, energy and patience for it, sure! But I’d be very realistic about what you might be able to do after graduating and (hopefully) passing the bar exam. Public defense is very demanding with high case loads and criminal litigation is stressful.
I work in legal aid and we had a volunteer that graduated from law school in her 70s. She had been an accountant for 30+ years and wanted to challenge herself. She sat for the bar three times and never passed, then gave up. She was still a great volunteer but never did become an attorney as she’d hoped.
If you’re interested in criminal justice issues, maybe you can complete some type of certificate program and get involved with advocacy work. Would be much less stressful than trying to enter the legal profession at that stage of life.
Good luck, whatever you decide!
Anonymous wrote:OK, I get it. Thank you.
-- OP
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a strong urge to study law and become a criminal law attorney. I'm in D.C. which has several law schools, with at least one (Catholic) having a night school. Yes? No?
Starting law school at age 68/69 is not a good idea. Plus--sorry to say--there is a good chance that you'll be viewed by other students & by law profs as a pain in the butt with time consuming questions that are best left for socializing over coffee.
Do you really have to be an ageist @zzhat? My 18yo complained vehemently his first year college about all the "dumb" questions and "when would it stop?" Nary a person over 25 in his midst.
Sounds like you & your kid are ageists.
That's a dense take.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, however if you have money and time, it could be a good hobby.
Law school and the first decade of working are anything but a hobby. It’s a grueling boot camp of training combining long hours and high stress situations.