Decisions, Decisions! (ND vs. UM)
Posted: Sat Mar 21, 2015 6:24 pm
Thanks for the help, everyone!
I've decided to wait it out and retake!
I've decided to wait it out and retake!
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=1&t=245350
Unless you have (and share) any actual reasoning behind that suggestion that directly applies to my situation, you're not being helpful at all.future!jd12 wrote:retake
Oh, absolutely not. ND is absolutely where I want to go, but I'm trying to see if that can be responsibly justified. I mean, ~70k (total, counting ug) debt when I'm not planning on making more than a government salary... I don't want to commit financial suicide or anything. I want to go to ND, but I don't want to sacrifice my future financial stability. Like I said, what I care most about is my ability to do my job and help support a family. Is ~70k debt considered "without a load of debt"? Honest question, no sarcasm.runinthefront wrote:although I think you'd be squandering your GPA, both options aren't terrible considering the standard "good standing" scholarships & your complete opposition to re-taking. I would go to the school in the region you have the strongest ties too (e.g., whichever school is closer to the area you've spent the most time/ have the most family...etc).
ETA: If you said you'd choose ND over Harvard in your prior thread, you're in at ND now and without a load of debt...this shouldn't be a question, right? Unless Miami > Harvard too?
I understand my fortune (not the right word) in terms of my GPA. I'm not trying to undervalue that. Had I taken the LSAT earlier, I would have retested already. The problem I have with taking a year off is that I have nowhere to be for that year, and I do not want to wait around living in limbo. Without knowing where I will be going to go to law school, I can either stay put in my UG town or choose somewhere else to move to, and possibly have to move again in another year. I know myself. I know that means I'll spend a year not putting down roots, hovering in limbo and not fully living. I can't do that. My sanity demands that I stop putting off my life.ub3r wrote:Please retake. I would kill for that GPA. You yourself say you underperformed because of illness
Take a year off, make money, retake, get more money from better schools, save more money.
Two years' cost of living and books/fees. It might be a bit lower if I had paid summer work, but I figured I should assume worst case.itascot1992 wrote:how is Miami COA 30k?
You aren't wrong from your skimming, but...BigZuck wrote:Not retaking when you could get a big scholarship to a school like NYU seems like a colossally bad decision but you've gotta do you
If you want to be a prosecutor then go to the local flagship regional in the region you want to live and work in long term. "I'll live anywhere!" sounds good but will probably hurt you. Acquire some geographic focus (ideally you'll want to work in the place with your strongest ties) and get ready to hustle your bustle from the start.
Sounds like ND is out because you aren't from the Midwest (at least I think, I kinda skimmed that beast of an OP so maybe I misread)
If you want PI in NY or PA you're going to have to hustle to get a job. Can't hustle when you're learning criminal procedure:investigation or whatever other inanities you'll have to suffer as a law student in Indiana.irishamerican wrote:Two years' cost of living and books/fees. It might be a bit lower if I had paid summer work, but I figured I should assume worst case.itascot1992 wrote:how is Miami COA 30k?
You aren't wrong from your skimming, but...BigZuck wrote:Not retaking when you could get a big scholarship to a school like NYU seems like a colossally bad decision but you've gotta do you
If you want to be a prosecutor then go to the local flagship regional in the region you want to live and work in long term. "I'll live anywhere!" sounds good but will probably hurt you. Acquire some geographic focus (ideally you'll want to work in the place with your strongest ties) and get ready to hustle your bustle from the start.
Sounds like ND is out because you aren't from the Midwest (at least I think, I kinda skimmed that beast of an OP so maybe I misread)
Do you mind if I ask a bit more about this whole "ties" thing? Because technically my strongest ties are to NC, and I absolutely do not ever want to go back to that state again. I've got family and residency in FL, but I've never really "lived" there beyond some summers. I've got no real ties to my UG state, which is on the other side of the country... And I was born in NY and have some family there, but haven't lived there in over a decade. Still, that's the region I'm most interested in: the PA/NY area, but I can't speak for the Midwest because I've never lived there before. Now, I remember ND alumni networks being pretty strong in PA and NY. Am I mistaken in thinking that might help with the whole 'ties' issue?
So you're just not gonna finish out the third year?irishamerican wrote:Two years' cost of living and books/fees. It might be a bit lower if I had paid summer work, but I figured I should assume worst case.itascot1992 wrote:how is Miami COA 30k?
I dont belive UM has a AJD, 15k a year won't cover COA in miami, unless you are living with family for free/cheapscottidsntknow wrote:So you're just not gonna finish out the third year?irishamerican wrote:Two years' cost of living and books/fees. It might be a bit lower if I had paid summer work, but I figured I should assume worst case.itascot1992 wrote:how is Miami COA 30k?
15k/yr also sounds pretty low in general for COL, plus you're clearly not factoring in interest.
I'm not going to lie about what I'm hoping to hear from this thread; I want to hear that I should go to ND. But I'm capable of keeping those hopes in check. I know that ND might not be the wisest choice. I know that, and contrary to popular belief, I'm not trying to run off anywhere. I'm just trying to pick a place I can start to settle down. Yeah, PA/NY is my idea of a climate and culture I generally like, but I'm not dead set on ending up there. I'll go where I can find a job. Maybe I'll go where my Significant Other can find a job. I don't know.BigZuck wrote:I have a feeling you will read that and see that it's "possible" and therefore run off to Notre Dame. But here's the thing about government hiring: sometimes there are freezes or very few openings. If you really want to be a prosecutor in Pennsylvania they are probably going to take the Temple kid who interned there over the summers and during the school year over the Notre Dame kid with no ties who only spent her summers there.
I wouldn't mess with employment chances just cuz you really like football games or leprechauns or whatever
You're right; I'm not factoring in interest, other than what's already accumulated from UG. As to the two year and 15k/yr part, that's because my family is covering one year and certain things (medical, phone, etc) are being covered until after I graduate. I struck a strange deal with my parents when I decided to graduate early. It's complicated.scottidsntknow wrote:So you're just not gonna finish out the third year?
15k/yr also sounds pretty low in general for COL, plus you're clearly not factoring in interest.
Firstly, it's not about having to try again. As I said, I'd happily try again. If I hadn't graduated early, and had taken the LSAT the first time with plenty of time to spare, I would have tried again. If the June LSAT counted, I'd try again. But I'm not comfortable living in limbo for another year. I get that that might not make sense to the majority of people on here, but that's the truth. For the sake of my mental health, I need to be able to actually live, not hover in a state of uncertainty, where I can't even put down roots. I can't survive without roots any longer; I haven't had roots in over a decade. I need them. To put off law school for a year means I'd have to hover somewhere in between for another year, and I know myself well enough to know that I can't do that. I can't.SweetTort wrote:People are getting Dillards at UVA with 4.0's and 168's. That's 3 questions. You really don't think it's worth it to try again for three flippin' questions?
I'm not expecting to stay in South Bend, but I could expect to make friends and a life and settle down, without constantly knowing that I was planning on moving across the country. If I stayed where I am now for a year, that wouldn't be the case at all. I don't need to know the exact city I'm going to live in forever, but I do need to be open to at least staying in the general region. If a relationship gets serious in law school, we can try to figure it out and I can be open to moving as necessary, but if a relationship got serious right now, where I am... I'm surrounded by people who refuse to ever leave the state, and I refuse to stay in it. I'm oversimplifying the issue on purpose.Tiago Splitter wrote:Are you kidding? Notre Dame is in South Bend, Indiana. There aren't any legal jobs there. So if you're going to school because you need to finally put down some roots you've picked an absolutely terrible place.
That's fair. Can you explain what you think the disconnect is? What I'm expecting vs what it will bring me? I just don't know how to take your statement without understanding what you mean.BigZuck wrote:I feel confident saying that law school isn't what you think it is (especially at Notre Dame) and that it, in and of itself, isn't going to bring you what you think it's going to bring you.
I know, I know, I don't know you, etc. But I dont really see this working out the way you want/think it will.
Seems like there is a lot of personal stuff you need to work out and obviously that is outside TLS' expertise. Personally, I can only speak very broadly as to what I know about legal employment from reading this forum, other real people's job search, and going through the process myself during law school. If you have modest PI goals I think your best bet is a regional flagship for cheap.
Good luck.
More like 20. He graduated a year early.BigZuck wrote:There's some need to flee/avoid your past going on, and it sounds like you're only like 22 and yet you have GOT TO GO NOW. I'm not really going to touch that other to say that adding law school on top of that isn't really going to make anything better in my opinion/from my experience.
I can see where you're getting that from. Believe me, I can. Actually, there was some fleeing/avoidance, so you're not really wrong. That was undergraduate for me--fleeing childhood and whatnot. Haha, oh, I've learned from that. I'm not fleeing right now; if I was, I wouldn't be considering a school where my family is. (; I'm just tired of waiting. I have the got-to-go-now urge, sure, but only because I actually know what I want for my life, and I'm not interested in sitting around twiddling my thumbs. Life's short, and all. I'd like to get to work and start making a difference. I'm done with the avoiding thing from undergrad. I'd like to continue living now. Now. Not in one year.BigZuck wrote:There's some need to flee/avoid your past going on, and it sounds like you're only like 22 and yet you have GOT TO GO NOW. I'm not really going to touch that other to say that adding law school on top of that isn't really going to make anything better in my opinion/from my experience.
As for Notre Dame, the Catholic thing seems superficial to me and shouldn't have anything to do with choosing a law school. I also doubt ND's COMMITMENT TO SERVICE is a real thing, or at least, any more real than at basically any other law school. Just sounds like marketing material to me.
You're right. But just like you don't understand the rush, I don't understand the ability to sit around twiddling thumbs contentedly. We're just different people, you and I.shifty_eyed wrote:More like 20. He graduated a year early.
I don't understand the rush.