Tips for Applying for Public Interest Summer Internships
Posted: Thu Nov 21, 2013 9:51 pm
This is my second year on the hiring committee for a non-profit so I thought I would try and help applicants for summer positions (mainly 1Ls) understand how to do a better job applying. I see a lot of BAD applications, many which come from applicants with decent resumes but who just cannot write a cover letter or just do not try to put together a quality application. Some of this is probably appropriate for private sector applications too.
I won't answer specific questions about where I work. It's a non-profit that does a range of legal services work and has a pretty large summer program.
1. Do not submit materials which we do not ask for. If the call for applications asks for a resume and cover letter, don't send me a writing sample and a transcript. This just makes me think you can't follow directions or are just spamming every place with the same things without paying attention. This is especially true if you send a bad writing sample or your grades are bad. I generally don't care about grades of an applicant but if they send a transcript, I will check it. Don't do that to yourself.
2. Don't describe the 1L curriculum to me and tell me you are qualified for the job because you took torts and con law. So did everyone else. It's a waste of space in a cover letter. Don't describe the LRW process to me, either.
3. Don't spend the whole cover letter talking about every law school club you are in and about what you do on a journal. Journals are all the same, and club work really isn't that useful. If you did do something more original, like start a legal services clinic or do pro-bono work, that is a much better subject.
4. You don't have to have a PI background to be a competitive candidate, especially for 1Ls. Just try and connect your experience you do have to how it will work in the position. A lot of PI work is the same research and writing you do anywhere else, and private sector work prepares you for that. If it's more direct services, talking about customer service experience or giving sales presentations can actually be fairly relevant if you successfully explain it.
5. Pay attention to what skills you will need for the job. Don't talk about how you honed your legal research and writing for the whole time if the position is doing intake at a foreclosure defense clinic. A lot of PI work in legal aid or similar organizations is more about people skills than research or writing.
6. Don't oversell your accomplishments. If you are not fluent in Spanish, don't say you are.
7. Talk about things that are not on your resume. Usually these are personal things that make you more able to relate to people from different backgrounds, or understand working with trauma victims. You don't have to get ultra-personal, but if you grew up relying on foodstamps and you want to apply for a job helping others access government benefits, that is a really good thing to discuss in a cover letter.
8. Say whether you have funding. If you do, you are honestly more likely to get an interview. If the organization can't pay you, it can be a waste of time to interview people who will ultimately decline because they can't take an unpaid job.
9. Be careful when discussing religious activities. If it's something like working in a soup kitchen run by a church, that's a good thing. But sometimes I can't tell if someone is talking about their love of public service or their love of converting non-believers. Leave proselytizing stuff off your resume, if possible. In a legal aid setting you encounter people of all faiths and backgrounds, and it is not good to have a legal intern try and have a Catholic prayer with a Muslim client (I have seen this happen).
10. Really short term experiences are kind of useless. I've seen a lot of applications that talk at length about how exposure to poverty while on a week long spring break trip changed their lives. That honestly just makes you sound pretty sheltered. In addition, if you are talking about prior clients who inspired you, keep the focus on you and not the person who inspired you. You are trying to get yourself a job, not them.
This all might seem quite simple, but it isn't for a lot of people. Maybe this will mean I can read some better applications this year.
I won't answer specific questions about where I work. It's a non-profit that does a range of legal services work and has a pretty large summer program.
1. Do not submit materials which we do not ask for. If the call for applications asks for a resume and cover letter, don't send me a writing sample and a transcript. This just makes me think you can't follow directions or are just spamming every place with the same things without paying attention. This is especially true if you send a bad writing sample or your grades are bad. I generally don't care about grades of an applicant but if they send a transcript, I will check it. Don't do that to yourself.
2. Don't describe the 1L curriculum to me and tell me you are qualified for the job because you took torts and con law. So did everyone else. It's a waste of space in a cover letter. Don't describe the LRW process to me, either.
3. Don't spend the whole cover letter talking about every law school club you are in and about what you do on a journal. Journals are all the same, and club work really isn't that useful. If you did do something more original, like start a legal services clinic or do pro-bono work, that is a much better subject.
4. You don't have to have a PI background to be a competitive candidate, especially for 1Ls. Just try and connect your experience you do have to how it will work in the position. A lot of PI work is the same research and writing you do anywhere else, and private sector work prepares you for that. If it's more direct services, talking about customer service experience or giving sales presentations can actually be fairly relevant if you successfully explain it.
5. Pay attention to what skills you will need for the job. Don't talk about how you honed your legal research and writing for the whole time if the position is doing intake at a foreclosure defense clinic. A lot of PI work in legal aid or similar organizations is more about people skills than research or writing.
6. Don't oversell your accomplishments. If you are not fluent in Spanish, don't say you are.
7. Talk about things that are not on your resume. Usually these are personal things that make you more able to relate to people from different backgrounds, or understand working with trauma victims. You don't have to get ultra-personal, but if you grew up relying on foodstamps and you want to apply for a job helping others access government benefits, that is a really good thing to discuss in a cover letter.
8. Say whether you have funding. If you do, you are honestly more likely to get an interview. If the organization can't pay you, it can be a waste of time to interview people who will ultimately decline because they can't take an unpaid job.
9. Be careful when discussing religious activities. If it's something like working in a soup kitchen run by a church, that's a good thing. But sometimes I can't tell if someone is talking about their love of public service or their love of converting non-believers. Leave proselytizing stuff off your resume, if possible. In a legal aid setting you encounter people of all faiths and backgrounds, and it is not good to have a legal intern try and have a Catholic prayer with a Muslim client (I have seen this happen).
10. Really short term experiences are kind of useless. I've seen a lot of applications that talk at length about how exposure to poverty while on a week long spring break trip changed their lives. That honestly just makes you sound pretty sheltered. In addition, if you are talking about prior clients who inspired you, keep the focus on you and not the person who inspired you. You are trying to get yourself a job, not them.
This all might seem quite simple, but it isn't for a lot of people. Maybe this will mean I can read some better applications this year.