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0Ls: What's your plan B? Forum
- NoodleyOne
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Sports broadcasting at a local Miami sports radio station. Still considering it actually.
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
- NoodleyOne
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Damn...ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
- El_Gallo
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
That's really neat. I didn't know starting salaries were so high for programmers. Thanks for posting.ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
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- ManoftheHour
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
We're all studying the wrong shit. :[ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
- scifiguy
- Posts: 575
- Joined: Sat Sep 15, 2012 2:41 pm
Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Wow!ManoftheHour wrote:We're all studying the wrong shit. :[ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
Goto "school" for 3 months $12K tuition and get a coder job within a few days/weeks of graduation at $100K/year at a cool office with video games, free food, free laundry, music, relaxation time, etc.
vs.
Goto law school for 3 years $150K tuition and possibly end up coding (document review) for $35K/year in a crowded law firm basement w/ no benefits.
???
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Culinary Arts is a good Doctorate to get, that and the Hospitality Managment PHd.
Hotels and Fast Food ALWAYS need crewchiefs and shift managers.......................
Hotels and Fast Food ALWAYS need crewchiefs and shift managers.......................
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
I'm a journalist, and that's not quite a field sufficient to start a family before the business model corrects itself. My plan B is to accept a full ride to my local TTT and get a job practicing the types of law I wouldn't love but wouldn't hate in a town I don't love but don't hate, for a while at least. Thankfully I can count on a job a bit more than most since I've built a network of virtually every bigger firm and govt agency in my hometown through a couple years of work. Plan C is to treat my guitar like the LSAT.
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
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Last edited by chadbrochill on Tue Aug 13, 2013 1:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
I'm not on the business side, but I'd say it's going to be perfectly-tuned advertising based on individual information more than paywalls that eventually do the trick. Basically trading some privacy for free or cheap news on your phone or laptop. Facebook and Google just started hitting hitting people with creepy omniscient ads in the past few years, and I think that's gonna take over, for better or worse. It's safe to say there's more demand for news than ever before, and I trust the business bros to find a way to make the profit.How do you see that happening? I am kind of interested in the business model, and while I have not looked into it too much, I have not heard any proposed changes that seem viable.
- lhanvt13
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
New plan B: become prominent member of Scientology and profit
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.html
From the article wrote: One San Francisco school called App Academy doesn't charge tuition. Instead, it asks for a 15 percent cut of the student's first-year salary. Graduates who can't find jobs don't have to pay, but so far nearly all of them have.
Sounds like a good model for all professional schools. Lawyers work on contingency fees all the time, this would be a great way to focus law schools on getting their graduates in to jobs, and jobs that are high-paying.
- ManoftheHour
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Source? Data?thelawdoctor wrote:Culinary Arts is a good Doctorate to get, that and the Hospitality Managment PHd.
Hotels and Fast Food ALWAYS need crewchiefs and shift managers.......................
I'm starting to panic. After a series of upper 160s and lower 170 PTs, I got a 165 today. June is my last retake and the only school I put a deposit down for is Loyola (96k with a scary 50% stip). F.U.C.K. I'm F#$%ed.
Maybe it's time to consider a different career. I've always been interested in the culinary arts. But culinary schools are expensive as fuck.
- scifiguy
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Jimbo_Jones wrote:ksllaw wrote:This may interest some:
video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q0z-C8Ke2FQ
article: http://news.yahoo.com/coding-boot-camps ... 23005.htmlFrom the article wrote: One San Francisco school called App Academy doesn't charge tuition. Instead, it asks for a 15 percent cut of the student's first-year salary. Graduates who can't find jobs don't have to pay, but so far nearly all of them have.
Sounds like a good model for all professional schools. Lawyers work on contingency fees all the time, this would be a great way to focus law schools on getting their graduates in to jobs, and jobs that are high-paying.
Personally, I'm not sure that this would work with law.
I think these "tech training camps" can do this b/c they expect their graduates to not only find work, but relatively high-paying work. So, they're willing to foot the bill (you can maybe consider it a gamble of sorts, depending on the circumstances).
Law is overcrowded and high-paying jobs are scarce. No law school would just allow you to attend for free and repay them in the future based on your salary. Too few people would probably be able to repay.
That's why law school economics don't seem to make sense. Huge costs to attend and gambling odds that you'll end up with a job that can repay your $100K+ loans.
You mentioned contingency fees for lawyers. Yes, some do work off of that, but my guess is they:
a.) take cases they think they have a good shot of winning
and/or
b.) they stand to gain a large sum of money if they win
It's not the same with legal education. The math isn't the same. ...Law schools really just have to change.
ETA: I'm not saying the model is a bad one. I think it'd be great actually (low stress on students!). But just saying that for law school it wouldn't work as of right now.
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Been accepted into some Canadian law schools (I'm Canadian and would prefer to work in Canada), but probably going to defer and/or reject the offers for this year. Started a business with my uncle and I'm mostly likely going to see how that goes over the next year or two before deciding whether I want to go to law school (so I guess that makes law school my plan B).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
It always amazes me how many Canadian come to America to do their law school when it is not even the same system of laws. Aren't parts of it based on French law like our state of LA?GuyLafleur wrote:Been accepted into some Canadian law schools (I'm Canadian and would prefer to work in Canada), but probably going to defer and/or reject the offers for this year. Started a business with my uncle and I'm mostly likely going to see how that goes over the next year or two before deciding whether I want to go to law school (so I guess that makes law school my plan B).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
- A. Nony Mouse
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
Only in Quebec. The rest of it comes from the British common law system, like our legal system does.thelawdoctor wrote:It always amazes me how many Canadian come to America to do their law school when it is not even the same system of laws. Aren't parts of it based on French law like our state of LA?GuyLafleur wrote:Been accepted into some Canadian law schools (I'm Canadian and would prefer to work in Canada), but probably going to defer and/or reject the offers for this year. Started a business with my uncle and I'm mostly likely going to see how that goes over the next year or two before deciding whether I want to go to law school (so I guess that makes law school my plan B).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
I don't think Imet any Quebec students, so maybe they all either stay home or go to a LA state law school........A. Nony Mouse wrote:Only in Quebec. The rest of it comes from the British common law system, like our legal system does.thelawdoctor wrote:It always amazes me how many Canadian come to America to do their law school when it is not even the same system of laws. Aren't parts of it based on French law like our state of LA?GuyLafleur wrote:Been accepted into some Canadian law schools (I'm Canadian and would prefer to work in Canada), but probably going to defer and/or reject the offers for this year. Started a business with my uncle and I'm mostly likely going to see how that goes over the next year or two before deciding whether I want to go to law school (so I guess that makes law school my plan B).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
You'd still think at least SOME major differences would apply though.
(being commonwealth and all)
I know the bahamas require a prelaw undergrad. (and so do some other commonwealth nations)Does Canada do it too?
If so, I could see THAT being a tiebreaker for someone with a non prelaw undergrad.
On that though, I wonder how ABA schools view those 3year "BA" degrees that some Canadians schools are giving out nowdays.
- danitt
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
The LLB isn't so much a prelaw degree as it is an actual law degree. The only thing is that after the LLB you have to do a two year legal education thing so the whole process ends up taking 5-6 years. For some people that time is a factor.thelawdoctor wrote:I don't think Imet any Quebec students, so maybe they all either stay home or go to a LA state law school........A. Nony Mouse wrote:Only in Quebec. The rest of it comes from the British common law system, like our legal system does.thelawdoctor wrote:It always amazes me how many Canadian come to America to do their law school when it is not even the same system of laws. Aren't parts of it based on French law like our state of LA?GuyLafleur wrote:Been accepted into some Canadian law schools (I'm Canadian and would prefer to work in Canada), but probably going to defer and/or reject the offers for this year. Started a business with my uncle and I'm mostly likely going to see how that goes over the next year or two before deciding whether I want to go to law school (so I guess that makes law school my plan B).
I've wanted to be a lawyer since I was in high school, but after doing a lot of research and seeking advice from a bunch of lawyers over the past few months, I realized I'd prefer being an entrepreneur/businessman over being a lawyer (although I still wouldn't mind becoming a lawyer).
You'd still think at least SOME major differences would apply though.
(being commonwealth and all)
I know the bahamas require a prelaw undergrad. (and so do some other commonwealth nations)Does Canada do it too?
If so, I could see THAT being a tiebreaker for someone with a non prelaw undergrad.
On that though, I wonder how ABA schools view those 3year "BA" degrees that some Canadians schools are giving out nowdays.
I think that ABA would be used to three year degrees because anyone who follows the British education system would have a three year degree.
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
I get the LLB vs JD part, I just know that when I was looking into the Bahamas LawSchool (I was bored and just goofing off that day) they said that only people with a previous undergrad in prelaw could apply (since it is a "second bachelors") They made it sound like all commonwealth nations were that way.
I think Canada is starting to switch to the JD though. I heard some Canadian students mention something about that once in passing I think.
I think Canada is starting to switch to the JD though. I heard some Canadian students mention something about that once in passing I think.
- jtabustos
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
http://www.nydailynews.com/opinion/job- ... e-1.951780
Want a job? Major in liberal arts: Technology firms need more than science and math skills
Kind of an old article. But anyone ever try to work for a tech firm?
Want a job? Major in liberal arts: Technology firms need more than science and math skills
Kind of an old article. But anyone ever try to work for a tech firm?
- rftdd888
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Re: 0Ls: What's your plan B?
yeah, as others have said my backup is probably just a lower ranked school. I should be a lock for UVA/michigan so either one of those.
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