"The, uh, stuff that dreams are made of."
Posted: Sat Jul 16, 2016 4:08 pm
(Bumped my own thread, not sure which section is more appropriate. Mods?)
Law School Discussion Forums
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=266545
Generally (always?) a LLM is not a good idea unless it is in tax. Even then, it's really only advisable if from NYU or maybe a few other schools with a top LLM tax program.Interna8yonal wrote:(Bumped my own thread, not sure which section is more appropriate. Mods?)
Hi, name is Mike. I too am a law student.
So, I assume how this place works is I just throw a question into the web-uverse and wise people respond with world class opinions and guidance where if I just follow everything they say I become the happiest millionaire to every live?
My first semester I got one C+ and this crushed my inflated hopes and dreams. I cried just a little, mostly moaned throughout the day. Since my second semester though, it’s been all roses and cognac. I’ll challenge anyone to a battle of B+’s. I have an arsenal, and a few A's. Throughout the first 2 years of law school I picked courses from different areas, and now when asked in interviews I tell employers that I’m a generalist trying to learn and get as much as I can out of the law school experience. Problem is, I can’t figure out what I want to practice. One more year of law to go and I’m considering studying abroad in an international business LLM program.
Yes, this is another “should I pursue an LLM and if so in which field, because I screwed up my first semester of law school and I’m trying to make sense out of life and my legal career by partially escaping from this bullshit and partially trying to tell employers ‘hey look at me I can do ____ and _____ and I can even do _____.’”
Also, is there a law school job interview equivalent for "I'm gonna make him an offer he can't refuse"?
Then congratulations, you won. Start narrowing down to a couple of your favorite fields of law, gun for those as a 3L, see who in your region can hire you as a graduate.My debt is super low
This is very true. They won't be totally irrelevant, especially if you can use it to differentiate yourself from other candidates (interest in a particular field backed up by a good grade in a course taken in that field, etc.) - but overall GPA is primarily important for the small fraction of legal jobs that do hiring very early (big firms, etc.) and a few government positions.twenty wrote:TWIST: no one actually cares about your grades at this point.
This is the credited response to your question regarding whether you should attend an LLM program.Br3v wrote:Generally (always?) a LLM is not a good idea unless it is in tax. Even then, it's really only advisable if from NYU or maybe a few other schools with a top LLM tax program.