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Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 12:29 pm
by freestallion
Quick question. I am thinking of eventually pursuing a dual/joint degree such as a JD/MA in international affairs/a related field, or JD/MSW. However, I haven't decided yet, and I am applying to law schools right now. Most applications ask whether you are applying for a joint degree program, but I haven't taken the GRE and I need more time to research and look into those programs. I was thinking that once I decide on a law school I like, I will explore the joint degree programs at that point and possibly apply during my 1st year of law school instead.
So right now, would it be fine to mark "no" to the question they ask about joint/dual degree programs? And still apply down the road if I find a program I'm interested in? Sorry if this is a stupid question

Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 12:49 pm
by Opie
I don't think it's a stupid question. I'm interested in the same situation. At my target school there is a JD/MBA program that doesn't start MBA classes until the second year of law school. I might try to join that program, but I'm not applying yet as I haven't taken the MCAT and don't really have time until after the LSAT in Oct.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 4:37 pm
by freestallion
Opie wrote:I don't think it's a stupid question. I'm interested in the same situation. At my target school there is a JD/MBA program that doesn't start MBA classes until the second year of law school. I might try to join that program, but I'm not applying yet as I haven't taken the MCAT and don't really have time until after the LSAT in Oct.
Thanks for your help. Do you mean the GMAT??
Do you think it would be fine to mark no now, and then apply later on if I am interested in a program?
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 4:39 pm
by descartesb4thehorse
freestallion wrote:Opie wrote:I don't think it's a stupid question. I'm interested in the same situation. At my target school there is a JD/MBA program that doesn't start MBA classes until the second year of law school. I might try to join that program, but I'm not applying yet as I haven't taken the MCAT and don't really have time until after the LSAT in Oct.
Thanks for your help. Do you mean the GMAT??
Do you think it would be fine to mark no now, and then apply later on if I am interested in a program?
Yes. Most masters programs don't require an application until your first year of LS.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 4:44 pm
by freestallion
Sounds good. Thanks

Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Thu Sep 15, 2011 9:33 pm
by Opie
Haha.. Yes. I meant the GMAT. That's how non-focused on it I am. I won't be doing any joint MD/JD programs. If such an insanely difficult thing actually exists. I know of a school that does a PharmD/JD though. That sounds pretty tough, but if you want to do patents in the drug industry it might be helpful.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:00 am
by Samara
I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:19 am
by thederangedwang
Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:22 am
by shoeshine
Thinking of dual or joint degrees...think again.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:33 am
by Samara
thederangedwang wrote:Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
That's funny. Honestly, I can't decide if it's a little weird or really cool. The guy I know graduated in 80s and has done very well for himself. I'm definitely impressed by him. He's gone a more academic route though, so it's probably different in that arena than the biglaw arena.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:39 am
by coldshoulder
thederangedwang wrote:Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
They have an MD/JD program at Duke.
I would prefer to be waterboarded continuously for 6 years.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:41 am
by freestallion
coldshoulder wrote:thederangedwang wrote:Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
They have an MD/JD program at Duke.
I would prefer to be waterboarded continuously for 6 years.
Seriously...WHAT is the point of doing an MD and JD? My med school friends have NO life, literally they study for like 12 hours a day. Add that to law school and I think I would internally combust.
I hear of someone who did a JD and then... decided to do her MD and become a doctor. She'll be 40 by the time she becomes a doctor

Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 2:48 pm
by worldtraveler
freestallion wrote:Quick question. I am thinking of eventually pursuing a dual/joint degree such as a JD/MA in international affairs/a related field, or JD/MSW. However, I haven't decided yet, and I am applying to law schools right now. Most applications ask whether you are applying for a joint degree program, but I haven't taken the GRE and I need more time to research and look into those programs. I was thinking that once I decide on a law school I like, I will explore the joint degree programs at that point and possibly apply during my 1st year of law school instead.
So right now, would it be fine to mark "no" to the question they ask about joint/dual degree programs? And still apply down the road if I find a program I'm interested in? Sorry if this is a stupid question

This is all school specific. Some require you to attend one program first and then apply to the other one. Some require simultaneous applications. Look at the websites.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 4:51 pm
by JDndMSW
As you can tell I am considering the same thing but most of the applications I have filled out ask if you are considering applying, some also specifically ask if you are planning to apply simultaneously which I have selected no. More than just taking the GRE I feel that I have no time for the extra applications. I have just decided to wait and see where I am accepted before I even consider applying. I am hoping that with an acceptance to that schools LS and an LSAT score some schools may give you another option then taking the GRE.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Fri Sep 16, 2011 10:56 pm
by quiver
coldshoulder wrote:thederangedwang wrote:Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
They have an MD/JD program at Duke.
I would prefer to be waterboarded continuously for 6 years.
I think a few schools have this. Pretty sure Case Western does too and some school in texas (Houston maybe?). I was looking into it for like 5 minutes before I applied to law school...then I smacked myself upside the head and moved on.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2011 8:05 am
by Yukos
freestallion wrote:coldshoulder wrote:thederangedwang wrote:Samara wrote:I don't know of any MD/JD programs, but I do know a guy who got his MD and JD from Harvard. I can't even imagine...
kinda funny, a lawyer dude told me a story about how he once reviewed the resume of a guy who had MD and JD from Harvard....he promptly threw out the resume....he told me "never trust a guy who has two careers" lol...maybe we know the same poor sap
They have an MD/JD program at Duke.
I would prefer to be waterboarded continuously for 6 years.
Seriously...WHAT is the point of doing an MD and JD? My med school friends have NO life, literally they study for like 12 hours a day. Add that to law school and I think I would internally combust.
I hear of someone who did a JD and then... decided to do her MD and become a doctor. She'll be 40 by the time she becomes a doctor

I would guess that Duke having a JD/MD program has to do with the fact that it borders the pharmaceutical company capital of the world. Not sure if you'd need the dual degree for IP lit or just general counsel stuff but it seems like there'd be positions that could use one.
Re: Thinking of dual or joint degrees
Posted: Sat Sep 17, 2011 1:43 pm
by suspicious android
The advice I've gotten from lawyers is that except for an MD or an MA in a science for those looking for IP work, it makes your resume stand out, but not in a good way. If you have lots of experience in that field, then an MA is nice, but maybe not necessary to go into that field after you get a JD. If you don't have any experience in that field, an MA/JD can make you look like a degree junkie. Unless you have a really specific reason to do this, with a precise career track in mind that requires both degrees, it sounds like a way to spend $$$ to put a credential on your resume that won't do much.