Rising 3L, Post Graduation Advice Forum

(Study Tips, Dealing With Stress, Maintaining a Social Life, Financial Aid, Internships, Bar Exam, Careers in Law . . . )
Post Reply
Wanderlust89

New
Posts: 13
Joined: Fri May 23, 2014 2:10 pm

Rising 3L, Post Graduation Advice

Post by Wanderlust89 » Mon Jul 06, 2015 10:46 pm

I don't know what kind of response I'll get to this, but here goes nothing.

Background: Prestigious undergrad, worked at a name-brand firm prior to law school, rising 3L at a top 25 law school, member of Law Review (wrote-on), just above median GPA.

I have a paid position currently with a federal agency in the practice area that I am interested in. However, it is extremely unlikely that the agency will hire any recently graduated attorneys due to the specialized work of the office.

I am thinking about post graduation plans and don't know where I should be looking...I'll owe $12,000 in student debt (undergrad and law school combined) at graduation due to generous scholarships and am not tied down by a significant other. I know firms don't hire rising 3Ls, plus I don't have the grades for a firm. I would love to do federal work, but know that my GPA isn't good enough for any of the honors program. I'm willing to relocate for a position. What steps and career paths would people suggest?

runinthefront

Gold
Posts: 2151
Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2014 2:18 am

Re: Rising 3L, Post Graduation Advice

Post by runinthefront » Mon Jul 06, 2015 10:49 pm

Wanderlust89 wrote:I don't know what kind of response I'll get to this, but here goes nothing.

Background: Prestigious undergrad, worked at a name-brand firm prior to law school, rising 3L at a top 25 law school, member of Law Review (wrote-on), just above median GPA.

I have a paid position currently with a federal agency in the practice area that I am interested in. However, it is extremely unlikely that the agency will hire any recently graduated attorneys due to the specialized work of the office.

I am thinking about post graduation plans and don't know where I should be looking...I'll owe $12,000 in student debt (undergrad and law school combined) at graduation due to generous scholarships and am not tied down by a significant other. I know firms don't hire rising 3Ls, plus I don't have the grades for a firm. I would love to do federal work, but know that my GPA isn't good enough for any of the honors program. I'm willing to relocate for a position. What steps and career paths would people suggest?
Steps.

1) Send a resume and cover letter out to the firms in any city you have any ties to, no matter the strength
2) stop selling yourself short: law review, decent undergrad and prior WE + some federal gov internship experience with a median gpa at a T25 is by no means biglaw secure, but you're definitely better off than many other applicants.

idk about how you'd secure a gov't position tho
Last edited by runinthefront on Sat Jan 27, 2018 12:24 am, edited 1 time in total.

User avatar
lacrossebrother

Platinum
Posts: 7150
Joined: Wed Jul 30, 2014 11:15 pm

Re: Rising 3L, Post Graduation Advice

Post by lacrossebrother » Mon Jul 06, 2015 11:19 pm

you know that "firms" refers to like all law firms, whereas, the hiring practices you're describing refer to a small sector of the legal industry called "biglaw firms." since you have like no debt, you can take the bar and then go to a city where you want to live and just find a job at a firm that isn't tied to the OCI thang. since i'm thinking you go to notre dame, iowa, or alabama, and you seem to like government stuff, I'd pick D.C. I think.

TransferHopeful17

New
Posts: 76
Joined: Sun Jun 07, 2015 11:46 am

Re: Rising 3L, Post Graduation Advice

Post by TransferHopeful17 » Tue Jul 07, 2015 8:40 am

1) Go where you can get great lit experience, regardless of the area.
2) Work a few years.
3) Apply to the fed job(s) of your choice.
4) Be persistent.
3) Get fed through lateral hire.

I'd have to think the VAST majority of fed is lateral. And yeah, don't sell yourself short. You're better off than many others.

Want to continue reading?

Register now to search topics and post comments!

Absolutely FREE!


Post Reply

Return to “Forum for Law School Students”