Clerks Taking Questions Forum
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- mjb447
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
+1 for it meaningfully increases your overall chances but will depend on the kinds of things FW listed.
- OutCold
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
The COA judge I ultimately clerked for called my district judge shortly after my interview. From what I gather, that was the deciding factor. My district was in the same circuit, so the judges were familiar with each other, though they had not had much contact previously.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Has anyone else been finding that their externs are woefully incompetent? I get that they're still in law school but jeez...
- mjb447
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Yes. I mean, I don't really expect them to be a net positive in terms of productivity - they're very new to law, they're not in chambers long enough to learn how we do things, and it's supposed to be for their own education anyway. That said, I've had a surprising number who seemed unable to write a grammatically correct sentence.Anonymous User wrote:Has anyone else been finding that their externs are woefully incompetent? I get that they're still in law school but jeez...
- Lincoln
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
2/5 were decent. 3/5 were so bad it was unbelievable.Anonymous User wrote:Has anyone else been finding that their externs are woefully incompetent? I get that they're still in law school but jeez...
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- jrf12886
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Yea, never once got my lunch or coffee.Anonymous User wrote:Has anyone else been finding that their externs are woefully incompetent? I get that they're still in law school but jeez...
- ggocat
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
This has been my expectation and experience for the past 5+ years. Maybe one or two have been useful.mjb447 wrote:I don't really expect them to be a net positive in terms of productivity
- A. Nony Mouse
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
The clerks at my 1L judicial internship told me that the judge had had such a bad experience with 2 interns from U of Chicago the previous year that he nearly didn't take any interns that summer. (This is really just me egregiously gloating about the fact that the Chicago interns sucked but he ended up super happy with us plebs from the local school.)
- rpupkin
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Was the problem poor work product? Or was it a personality thing?A. Nony Mouse wrote:The clerks at my 1L judicial internship told me that the judge had had such a bad experience with 2 interns from U of Chicago the previous year that he nearly didn't take any interns that summer. (This is really just me egregiously gloating about the fact that the Chicago interns sucked but he ended up super happy with us plebs from the local school.)
- A. Nony Mouse
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I think there was a little bit of personality, but primarily they couldn't write at all (to be fair to the interns, my impression is that legal writing at Chicago is taught mostly (exclusively?) by fellows who are often more interested in/qualified for getting an academic job than the actual nitty gritty of teaching writing, so their training in legal writing sounds very hit or miss). And also to be fair, this is just what I was told - no idea how true it is.rpupkin wrote:Was the problem poor work product? Or was it a personality thing?A. Nony Mouse wrote:The clerks at my 1L judicial internship told me that the judge had had such a bad experience with 2 interns from U of Chicago the previous year that he nearly didn't take any interns that summer. (This is really just me egregiously gloating about the fact that the Chicago interns sucked but he ended up super happy with us plebs from the local school.)
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Though to be fair, in general I think the quality between the local TT kids and T6 kids is pretty staggering. We get a lot of externs from the local school ranked 40-60, and they have writing samples that got As in their legal writing class that would have been B+s at best where I went to school.A. Nony Mouse wrote:The clerks at my 1L judicial internship told me that the judge had had such a bad experience with 2 interns from U of Chicago the previous year that he nearly didn't take any interns that summer. (This is really just me egregiously gloating about the fact that the Chicago interns sucked but he ended up super happy with us plebs from the local school.)
- A. Nony Mouse
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Well, thanks.Anonymous User wrote:Though to be fair, in general I think the quality between the local TT kids and T6 kids is pretty staggering. We get a lot of externs from the local school ranked 40-60, and they have writing samples that got As in their legal writing class that would have been B+s at best where I went to school.A. Nony Mouse wrote:The clerks at my 1L judicial internship told me that the judge had had such a bad experience with 2 interns from U of Chicago the previous year that he nearly didn't take any interns that summer. (This is really just me egregiously gloating about the fact that the Chicago interns sucked but he ended up super happy with us plebs from the local school.)
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I didn't mean that as an insult to those who can actually write. Just making an observation about the relative writing abilities of the 2 populations writ large.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Plot twist: in my chambers, the best externs are the top kids from local schools, not the T6ers who worked here over the summer.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I wouldn't consider that surprising. This might rustle some jimmies, but I have a feeling that the top kids at decent law schools (basically, law schools that have some admission standards) are on par with the kids in the top 10% (and I'm being conservative) at top law schools.Anonymous User wrote:Plot twist: in my chambers, the best externs are the top kids from local schools, not the T6ers who worked here over the summer.
- mjb447
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Same.Anonymous User wrote:Plot twist: in my chambers, the best externs are the top kids from local schools, not the T6ers who worked here over the summer.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.

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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I think that's true only up to a certain level of school. Below that, given the realities of grading on a curve, finishing #1 really doesn't say much given the low caliber of the competition.lavarman84 wrote:If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
That was already stated earlier. Obviously, I'm not talking about schools that take anyone with a pulse like Cooley.FascinatedWanderer wrote:I think that's true only up to a certain level of school. Below that, given the realities of grading on a curve, finishing #1 really doesn't say much given the low caliber of the competition.lavarman84 wrote:If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
I think we just draw the line in different places. By my thinking, once you're outside the top 30 law schools and admissions rates creep into 40%+ you have to be well north of top 10% before your performance convinces me of your competence.lavarman84 wrote:That was already stated earlier. Obviously, I'm not talking about schools that take anyone with a pulse like Cooley.FascinatedWanderer wrote:I think that's true only up to a certain level of school. Below that, given the realities of grading on a curve, finishing #1 really doesn't say much given the low caliber of the competition.lavarman84 wrote:If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Why not the top 28 law schools and admissions rates above 37%?Anonymous User wrote:I think we just draw the line in different places. By my thinking, once you're outside the top 30 law schools and admissions rates creep into 40%+ you have to be well north of top 10% before your performance convinces me of your competence.lavarman84 wrote:That was already stated earlier. Obviously, I'm not talking about schools that take anyone with a pulse like Cooley.FascinatedWanderer wrote:I think that's true only up to a certain level of school. Below that, given the realities of grading on a curve, finishing #1 really doesn't say much given the low caliber of the competition.lavarman84 wrote:If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.

You might have a preftige problem.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
lavarman84 wrote:Why not the top 28 law schools and admissions rates above 37%?Anonymous User wrote:I think we just draw the line in different places. By my thinking, once you're outside the top 30 law schools and admissions rates creep into 40%+ you have to be well north of top 10% before your performance convinces me of your competence.lavarman84 wrote:That was already stated earlier. Obviously, I'm not talking about schools that take anyone with a pulse like Cooley.FascinatedWanderer wrote:I think that's true only up to a certain level of school. Below that, given the realities of grading on a curve, finishing #1 really doesn't say much given the low caliber of the competition.lavarman84 wrote:If we're talking #1 or #2 in their class, they're comparable to just about anyone.Anonymous User wrote:I've never had the opportunity to observer the absolute top kids at the local schools. So far we've had guys in the top 20-30%. I'd gauge them as being slightly weaker than median T6ers.
But I wouldn't be surprised if the valedictorian/salutatorian at this level of school were comparable to T14 top 10% kids.![]()
You might have a preftige problem.
As a mental heuristic you have to draw the line somewhere. The fact of the matter is that huge chunk of law school students are those who had no idea what to do with their lives. They have massively inflated GPAs from bullshit majors like psychology or communications or "social studies" and on top of that a lot of them come from undergrad institutions that are less than rigorous.
So if a law school is accepting fully 40% of these applicants, well...
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
Having to draw the line someone and drawing the line in an arbitrary manner for a bar as low as "competence" are two pretty different things.FascinatedWanderer wrote:As a mental heuristic you have to draw the line somewhere. The fact of the matter is that huge chunk of law school students are those who had no idea what to do with their lives. They have massively inflated GPAs from bullshit majors like psychology or communications or "social studies" and on top of that a lot of them come from undergrad institutions that are less than rigorous.
So if a law school is accepting fully 40% of these applicants, well...
But I'm not surprised people feel that way. It's a matter of perspective.
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Re: Clerks Taking Questions
To be clear, I didn't mean competence as a human being in some larger sense. I meant competence to do the work of the court and conduct legal analysis of sufficiently high quality.lavarman84 wrote:Having to draw the line someone and drawing the line in an arbitrary manner for a bar as low as "competence" are two pretty different things.FascinatedWanderer wrote:As a mental heuristic you have to draw the line somewhere. The fact of the matter is that huge chunk of law school students are those who had no idea what to do with their lives. They have massively inflated GPAs from bullshit majors like psychology or communications or "social studies" and on top of that a lot of them come from undergrad institutions that are less than rigorous.
So if a law school is accepting fully 40% of these applicants, well...
But I'm not surprised people feel that way. It's a matter of perspective.
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