--ImageRemoved--KamaalTheAbstract wrote:what I'm saying is not lawyers have no skills.
Question about the struggling legal market. Forum
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Using an iPhone and walking but nevertheless you're cool for highlighting the typo bro. Considering you're not even in law school yet, it seems right that you limit your posts in the employment forum to catching typos. Keep fighting the good fight.bk187 wrote:--ImageRemoved--KamaalTheAbstract wrote:what I'm saying is not lawyers have no skills.
- YourCaptain
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
I am one of the last people to defend the legal profession but this is simply untrue.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I'm not going to derail the thread. So I'll wrap up with this: what I'm saying is not lawyers have no skills. I just believe my sister who is a doctor would have no problem swapping places with and she would end up as being just a good a lawyer. All of these skills you speak, in my opinion are cultivated and learned. I think anyone if reasonable intelligence, and by reasonable intelligence I mean people who are successful in their own careers (banking,consultants, doctors, engineers) would be successful at a lawfirm as well. Not trying to say everyone is useless at a law firm.Renzo wrote:You're right. No one is going to ask you what the definition of 'is' is. In fact, people probably won't be asking you for much input during your years at a law firm, since you aspire to exactly as good at being a lawyer as your secretary would be if he or she had to fill in for you for the day.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:Dude shut up. You talk too much for someone who In reality knows nothing. I think I'll be able to get through my years at my law firm without ever being in the situation to ask what the definition of is is. I'm sure you on the other hand will be arguing cases in front of the supreme court.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
You know this guys sister?YourCaptain wrote:I am one of the last people to defend the legal profession but this is simply untrue.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I'm not going to derail the thread. So I'll wrap up with this: what I'm saying is not lawyers have no skills. I just believe my sister who is a doctor would have no problem swapping places with and she would end up as being just a good a lawyer. All of these skills you speak, in my opinion are cultivated and learned. I think anyone if reasonable intelligence, and by reasonable intelligence I mean people who are successful in their own careers (banking,consultants, doctors, engineers) would be successful at a lawfirm as well. Not trying to say everyone is useless at a law firm.Renzo wrote:You're right. No one is going to ask you what the definition of 'is' is. In fact, people probably won't be asking you for much input during your years at a law firm, since you aspire to exactly as good at being a lawyer as your secretary would be if he or she had to fill in for you for the day.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:Dude shut up. You talk too much for someone who In reality knows nothing. I think I'll be able to get through my years at my law firm without ever being in the situation to ask what the definition of is is. I'm sure you on the other hand will be arguing cases in front of the supreme court.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Got her on speed-dial for *those* moments.kublaikahn wrote:You know this guys sister?YourCaptain wrote:I am one of the last people to defend the legal profession but this is simply untrue.KamaalTheAbstract wrote: I'm not going to derail the thread. So I'll wrap up with this: what I'm saying is not lawyers have no skills. I just believe my sister who is a doctor would have no problem swapping places with and she would end up as being just a good a lawyer. All of these skills you speak, in my opinion are cultivated and learned. I think anyone if reasonable intelligence, and by reasonable intelligence I mean people who are successful in their own careers (banking,consultants, doctors, engineers) would be successful at a lawfirm as well. Not trying to say everyone is useless at a law firm.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
I just don't know what kind of SA experiences you guys have that you think a med student could do that work. Im a joint degree student and I SAd for two summers and have done nothing to this date that my sister that went to Penn med couldn't do. Obviously I don't think you could throw her in at the level of 3rd year associate but I don't think any of us could do that
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
You seem to have a hard on for your sister. Might want to have that checked out.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I just don't know what kind of SA experiences you guys have that you think a med student could do that work. Im a joint degree student and I SAd for two summers and have done nothing to this date that my sister that went to Penn med couldn't do. Obviously I don't think you could throw her in at the level of 3rd year associate but I don't think any of us could do that
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Everybody knows this guy's sisterkublaikahn wrote:You know this guys sister?
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
You're on fire tonight man.bk187 wrote:You seem to have a hard on for your sister. Might want to have that checked out.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I just don't know what kind of SA experiences you guys have that you think a med student could do that work. Im a joint degree student and I SAd for two summers and have done nothing to this date that my sister that went to Penn med couldn't do. Obviously I don't think you could throw her in at the level of 3rd year associate but I don't think any of us could do that
- Julio_El_Chavo
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
These are skills needed in almost every high paying job, including medical jobs. You don't think doctors have to think analytically or logically? Understanding chemistry, biology, and anatomy requires reading comprehension. Bringing yourself up to speed on the latest treatments requires parsing medical studies. Etc.rayiner wrote:This is a pat answer, but it's not really true. Parsing statutory language or a contract to see what a corporate client is and is not allowed to do requires a certain logical/analytical skill. Arguing a point based on examples or case law requires a certain analytical and persuasive skill. Writing well and clearly requires skill. Negotiating requires skill. This is the bread and butter of what lawyers do.Julio_El_Chavo wrote:There's no intersection because there are no skills needed to do well in the legal profession.rayiner wrote:I'm the first one to point out the inherent risks of law school, but the two are not fungible at all. Being a doctor and being a lawyer are two completely different jobs. The set of skills needed to do well in each profession have almost no intersection between them.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
And dude you might want to get out more. 13,000 plus posts and you're not even in law school yet. This website must be like your second life. Just sitting on TLS waiting to pounce on typos and get into anonymous internet beef.bk187 wrote:You seem to have a hard on for your sister. Might want to have that checked out.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I just don't know what kind of SA experiences you guys have that you think a med student could do that work. Im a joint degree student and I SAd for two summers and have done nothing to this date that my sister that went to Penn med couldn't do. Obviously I don't think you could throw her in at the level of 3rd year associate but I don't think any of us could do that
- MrPapagiorgio
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Goddamn bk. You attract these people like cocaine attracts charlie sheen.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:And dude you might want to get out more. 13,000 plus posts and you're not even in law school yet. This website must be like your second life. Just sitting on TLS waiting to pounce on typos and get into anonymous internet beef.bk187 wrote:You seem to have a hard on for your sister. Might want to have that checked out.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:I just don't know what kind of SA experiences you guys have that you think a med student could do that work. Im a joint degree student and I SAd for two summers and have done nothing to this date that my sister that went to Penn med couldn't do. Obviously I don't think you could throw her in at the level of 3rd year associate but I don't think any of us could do that
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
1) there are several very different types of analytic thinking. It's not all fungible. One of the things you learn in medical school is "think like a doctor." They call it clinical decisonmaking; and, like legal analysis, it's an important skill that takes considerable work to master.Julio_El_Chavo wrote:These are skills needed in almost every high paying job, including medical jobs. You don't think doctors have to think analytically or logically? Understanding chemistry, biology, and anatomy requires reading comprehension. Bringing yourself up to speed on the latest treatments requires parsing medical studies. Etc.rayiner wrote:This is a pat answer, but it's not really true. Parsing statutory language or a contract to see what a corporate client is and is not allowed to do requires a certain logical/analytical skill. Arguing a point based on examples or case law requires a certain analytical and persuasive skill. Writing well and clearly requires skill. Negotiating requires skill. This is the bread and butter of what lawyers do.Julio_El_Chavo wrote:There's no intersection because there are no skills needed to do well in the legal profession.rayiner wrote:I'm the first one to point out the inherent risks of law school, but the two are not fungible at all. Being a doctor and being a lawyer are two completely different jobs. The set of skills needed to do well in each profession have almost no intersection between them.
2) Basically zero doctors are up to speed on the latest treatments, and what little they do know they were taught by shills for drug and device companies.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
What is most prestigious: Going to a good medical school or top 14 law school?
- Blessedassurance
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Lay prestige or what? I'd imagine an employed doctor is in a better position than an unemployed lawyer. Hell, an employed nurse is better than an unemployed lawyer. No offense to nurses.Anonymous User wrote:What is most prestigious: Going to a good medical school or top 14 law school?
Lay prestige means nothing and can be funny. I met some guys in Northern, VA who didn't know anything about Stanford or the fact that it had a law school and thought Georgetown was heaven.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Lay prestige from a top-14 graduate with a big firm job v. a medical school graduate from a good school with a good job.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
What do they call the dude that graduated last in his class in medical school?Anonymous User wrote:Lay prestige from a top-14 graduate with a big firm job v. a medical school graduate from a good school with a good job.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
They call him a doctor and the equivalent in law school a barista.kublaikahn wrote:What do they call the dude that graduated last in his class in medical school?Anonymous User wrote:Lay prestige from a top-14 graduate with a big firm job v. a medical school graduate from a good school with a good job.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
I still say there are striking similarities between diagnosing potential legal issues and diagnosing potential health problems. There are reasoning skills common to both professions. The fact of the matter is that med schools are better at limiting enrollment and therefore it's harder to get into medical school. By implication, medical students are smarter than most law students. I realize that you're going to be a lawyer and you want to feel special, but what the vast majority of lawyers do is not difficult. Not everyone is penning exquisite prose in court opinions or writing scholarly articles. Most attorney are doing rote tasks that are extremely repetitive, boring, and low-wattage.Renzo wrote:1) there are several very different types of analytic thinking. It's not all fungible. One of the things you learn in medical school is "think like a doctor." They call it clinical decisonmaking; and, like legal analysis, it's an important skill that takes considerable work to master.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Have you ever done any real legal work? During my SA I actually ran into a point of first impression and had to write a memo based on a series of Supreme Court cases. While very few people argue cases like Citizens United on a regular basis, even unglamorous civil litigation can require you to interpret some new provision in some random law in light of established precedent. If you do corporate work, even as a junior you'll be asked to summarize very complex contractual provisions that use lots of accounting and business concepts that you have to teach yourself.KamaalTheAbstract wrote:Dude shut up. You talk too much for someone who In reality knows nothing. I think I'll be able to get through my years at my law firm without ever being in the situation to ask what the definition of is is. I'm sure you on the other hand will be arguing cases in front of the supreme court.
The LSAT, law exams, etc, select for people who are quick thinkers and there is a nugget of utility in that. While some legal work could be done by a high school student, even simple tasks like doc review or summarizing a deal provision can require you to quickly learn about your clients business. When you do corporate work you need to understand complex contractual provisions which are as varied as the varied businesses that do the deals you'll work on. When you do litigation you'll be asked to become a little bit of an expert in some completely random subjects.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
There's nothing wrong with the top students having to find good jobs. I dont think the number of schools and number of graduates is a problem.
The problem is that Barrie Law charges just as much in tuition as Harvard.
The problem is that Barrie Law charges just as much in tuition as Harvard.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
No doubt the average med student is smarter than the average law student, but a lot of students at top med schools probably couldn't get the LSAT necessary to get into a top law school.Julio_El_Chavo wrote:I still say there are striking similarities between diagnosing potential legal issues and diagnosing potential health problems. There are reasoning skills common to both professions. The fact of the matter is that med schools are better at limiting enrollment and therefore it's harder to get into medical school. By implication, medical students are smarter than most law students. I realize that you're going to be a lawyer and you want to feel special, but what the vast majority of lawyers do is not difficult. Not everyone is penning exquisite prose in court opinions or writing scholarly articles. Most attorney are doing rote tasks that are extremely repetitive, boring, and low-wattage.Renzo wrote:1) there are several very different types of analytic thinking. It's not all fungible. One of the things you learn in medical school is "think like a doctor." They call it clinical decisonmaking; and, like legal analysis, it's an important skill that takes considerable work to master.
As someone who has worked in demanding non-law fields I think Renzo's post about different types of analytical thinking is absolutely spot-on. The analytical skills required to be a good programmer, for example, are very different than the ones required to be a good physicist. I.e. it's quite possible to do well in Combinatorics and terribly in Differential Equations, even though both are "math."
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
The absolute worst doctors are clearly more intelligent than the absolute worst lawyers. That's because medical school admissions keep people who do not have the minimum talent to get the job done out, while a new law school opens at least once a year to let in the people who aren't minimally competent for any of the extant law schools.
There is a rationale for that, at least on the medical school end: bad doctors kill people. Literally. Hell, even a good doctor will quite likely a few people over the course of the thousands upon thousands he will treat.
When it comes to law, there is lawyering, and there is lawyering. The mindless rote work that you did as a 2L SA, and probably 99.9% of the work done by anyone who spends four years at a white shoe firm and then bails, could be done by a retarded chimpanzee. Fine. But when a renowned litigation partner goes to court, or a skilled corporate partner brokers a complex deal, there's a mystical blend of time-refined skilled and natural talent on display that can rival absolutely anything in medicine.
As exhibit A, note http://www.iqcomparisonsite.com/Images/OccsX.jpg. Up to the 50th percentile in each profession, doctors slay lawyers in IQ, whatever that actually measures. At the 75th percentile, they're incredibly close, and at 90th percentile, they're almost identical.
There is a rationale for that, at least on the medical school end: bad doctors kill people. Literally. Hell, even a good doctor will quite likely a few people over the course of the thousands upon thousands he will treat.
When it comes to law, there is lawyering, and there is lawyering. The mindless rote work that you did as a 2L SA, and probably 99.9% of the work done by anyone who spends four years at a white shoe firm and then bails, could be done by a retarded chimpanzee. Fine. But when a renowned litigation partner goes to court, or a skilled corporate partner brokers a complex deal, there's a mystical blend of time-refined skilled and natural talent on display that can rival absolutely anything in medicine.
As exhibit A, note http://www.iqcomparisonsite.com/Images/OccsX.jpg. Up to the 50th percentile in each profession, doctors slay lawyers in IQ, whatever that actually measures. At the 75th percentile, they're incredibly close, and at 90th percentile, they're almost identical.
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
one thing i dont understand is that if students from top law schools are having trouble finding employment, how does ANYONE from a TT etc get any kind of employment?
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Re: Question about the struggling legal market.
Because contrary to TLS wisdom, one's choice in school doesn't mean everything. Grades and regional ties are also huge, as might be pre-law work experience.Anonymous User wrote:one thing i dont understand is that if students from top law schools are having trouble finding employment, how does ANYONE from a TT etc get any kind of employment?
Seriously? What are you waiting for?
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