Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone decides to go to law school nowadays with such a bad market for lawyers. I currently am working at BigLaw and have been looking to lateral for over 2 years with no luck. Good luck to you OP, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.
The issue is not going to law school. It is going to U. Md. law school, in a declining city like Baltimore. It is not a good investment unless you already have or can make connections in that city. It will not open doors in the financial or regulatory centers.
PP is even worse off than this. s/he went to university of baltimore, which is ranked in the fourth tier. UMD is at least ranked in the 30s/40s (depending on the ranking year). having said that, UMD is a bad idea. even Georgetown is a pretty dicey proposition. funny that in one of the biggest law markets in the country, there isn't a single school that is actually worth the investment. (and i say this as a UMD grad working in biglaw)
Baltimore is not a declining city. What does that even mean? It is one of the wealthiest metro areas in the country, for the same reason DC is that much wealthier - access to govt jobs. UMD Law is not a bad idea if you don't borrow too much.
UB is much worse than UM, that is apples to oranges.
the legal job market is in the toilet. UMD is a bad idea even if you have a full ride, in that you have wasted 3 years of your life and your job prospects are bad if you are outside the top 15% or so. overall, you are better off doing something other than law unless you get into a top 10 school. and, actually, top 10 is pushing it. more like top 5. i am the UMD grad who posted above, so not a UMD hater - just pointing out the reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone decides to go to law school nowadays with such a bad market for lawyers. I currently am working at BigLaw and have been looking to lateral for over 2 years with no luck. Good luck to you OP, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.
The issue is not going to law school. It is going to U. Md. law school, in a declining city like Baltimore. It is not a good investment unless you already have or can make connections in that city. It will not open doors in the financial or regulatory centers.
PP is even worse off than this. s/he went to university of baltimore, which is ranked in the fourth tier. UMD is at least ranked in the 30s/40s (depending on the ranking year). having said that, UMD is a bad idea. even Georgetown is a pretty dicey proposition. funny that in one of the biggest law markets in the country, there isn't a single school that is actually worth the investment. (and i say this as a UMD grad working in biglaw)
Baltimore is not a declining city. What does that even mean? It is one of the wealthiest metro areas in the country, for the same reason DC is that much wealthier - access to govt jobs. UMD Law is not a bad idea if you don't borrow too much.
UB is much worse than UM, that is apples to oranges.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone decides to go to law school nowadays with such a bad market for lawyers. I currently am working at BigLaw and have been looking to lateral for over 2 years with no luck. Good luck to you OP, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.
The issue is not going to law school. It is going to U. Md. law school, in a declining city like Baltimore. It is not a good investment unless you already have or can make connections in that city. It will not open doors in the financial or regulatory centers.
PP is even worse off than this. s/he went to university of baltimore, which is ranked in the fourth tier. UMD is at least ranked in the 30s/40s (depending on the ranking year). having said that, UMD is a bad idea. even Georgetown is a pretty dicey proposition. funny that in one of the biggest law markets in the country, there isn't a single school that is actually worth the investment. (and i say this as a UMD grad working in biglaw)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone decides to go to law school nowadays with such a bad market for lawyers. I currently am working at BigLaw and have been looking to lateral for over 2 years with no luck. Good luck to you OP, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.
The issue is not going to law school. It is going to U. Md. law school, in a declining city like Baltimore. It is not a good investment unless you already have or can make connections in that city. It will not open doors in the financial or regulatory centers.
Anonymous wrote:I'm surprised anyone decides to go to law school nowadays with such a bad market for lawyers. I currently am working at BigLaw and have been looking to lateral for over 2 years with no luck. Good luck to you OP, but I wouldn't get your hopes up.