Undergrad Federal Appellate Judicial Externship as soft factor?
Posted: Fri Oct 28, 2016 1:09 pm
Hi all,
When I was an undergrad, I spent a summer working as a judicial extern for a federal appellate judge with a pretty good reputation as feeder for Supreme Court clerkships. I obviously wasn't writing opinions, though I did get to produce a lot of other writing (think speeches, inter-chambers memos to concurring judges, etc.) for the judge, who is writing one of my LORs. I'm curious as to how this experience might be viewed as a soft factor in law school admissions--can anyone shed some light on that subject? Where might such an externship rank in the panoply of law school soft factors--I know it's considerably less impressive than a Rhodes or a Marshall or something of that ilk, but is this still the sort of thing that would intrigue admissions officers?
Thanks much in advance.
When I was an undergrad, I spent a summer working as a judicial extern for a federal appellate judge with a pretty good reputation as feeder for Supreme Court clerkships. I obviously wasn't writing opinions, though I did get to produce a lot of other writing (think speeches, inter-chambers memos to concurring judges, etc.) for the judge, who is writing one of my LORs. I'm curious as to how this experience might be viewed as a soft factor in law school admissions--can anyone shed some light on that subject? Where might such an externship rank in the panoply of law school soft factors--I know it's considerably less impressive than a Rhodes or a Marshall or something of that ilk, but is this still the sort of thing that would intrigue admissions officers?
Thanks much in advance.