3L classes for clerkship
Posted: Wed Jul 30, 2014 4:43 pm
Any suggestions for a fed dist clerkship besides the usual fed courts and district clerk writing seminar?
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Clerk who recommended a 1983 civil rights course here. This is a very good list, except that my law school didn't have several of these (that sound fascinating, by the way).Citizen Genet wrote:If I were designing 2L and 3L classes specifically around preparing for a clerkship, here is what I would do. I am assuming that your judge has you work on both civil and criminal matters. (That's not true of all judges.)
Definitely Take No Matter What
Federal Courts, Advanced Civil Procedure
Evidence
Statutory Interpretation
Criminal Procedure I (Investigation, covering 4th-5th Amendment)
Criminal Procedure II (Litigation, covering 5th-8th Amendment and procedure)
Conflicts of Law
Remedies
Administrative Law
Employment Law
Definitely Take If You're In A Market With Major Commercial Litigation
Business Associations
Complex Civil Litigation / Class Action Litigation
Try To Fit These In
Civil Rights Litigation (especially if 1983 is not covered in-depth in FedCourts)
Bankruptcy
Intellectual Property*** (if your judge is a patent pilot program judge, then make this a definitely have to take; otherwise, do it if you have the time)
Discovery
First Amendment
Secured Transactions
Securities Regulation and Litigation
That is about 55-62 credits worth of classes. Other clerks, did I miss anything?
timmyd wrote:The lists look good. I know I should take employment law and fed courts is a must. I'm thinking about dropping FIT for admin if I still can. I really wanted to take FIT because of its practical value, but I just cannot see it being of much value for the clerkship.
D. ct. clerk here and I agree with most of this.Anonymous User wrote:Clerk who recommended a 1983 civil rights course here. This is a very good list, except that my law school didn't have several of these (that sound fascinating, by the way).Citizen Genet wrote:If I were designing 2L and 3L classes specifically around preparing for a clerkship, here is what I would do. I am assuming that your judge has you work on both civil and criminal matters. (That's not true of all judges.)
Definitely Take No Matter What
Federal Courts, Advanced Civil Procedure
Evidence
Statutory Interpretation
Criminal Procedure I (Investigation, covering 4th-5th Amendment)
Criminal Procedure II (Litigation, covering 5th-8th Amendment and procedure)
Conflicts of Law
Remedies
Administrative Law
Employment Law
Definitely Take If You're In A Market With Major Commercial Litigation
Business Associations
Complex Civil Litigation / Class Action Litigation
Try To Fit These In
Civil Rights Litigation (especially if 1983 is not covered in-depth in FedCourts)
Bankruptcy
Intellectual Property*** (if your judge is a patent pilot program judge, then make this a definitely have to take; otherwise, do it if you have the time)
Discovery
First Amendment
Secured Transactions
Securities Regulation and Litigation
That is about 55-62 credits worth of classes. Other clerks, did I miss anything?
If the courses he calls "discovery" and "advanced civil lit" are in-depth civ pro classes that focus on the federal rules, then absolutely take them. If by "advanced civil lit" he means "complex civil lit," then, as much as I super-enjoyed that class and get some use out of it in my clerkship, I can't say it really makes the list. (If your district is MDL-heavy, though, maybe that's another story.)
All I'll add is that some highly important clerkship stuff--First Amendment law leaps to mind--is actually covered pretty well by bar exam prep, assuming you're taking the bar pre-clerkship (which I'm an advocate for). Other than Evidence, I think you could probably forgo the classes covered by the MBE. Just my opinion.
Are these ranked in order of importance, or how would you rank them?Citizen Genet wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2014 5:53 pm
Definitely Take No Matter What
Federal Courts, Advanced Civil Procedure
Evidence
Statutory Interpretation
Criminal Procedure I (Investigation, covering 4th-5th Amendment)
Criminal Procedure II (Litigation, covering 5th-8th Amendment and procedure)
Conflicts of Law
Remedies
Administrative Law
Employment Law
Conflicts was not taught at my law school, so I didn't have a choice in the matter anyway, but it did not come up in a serious way in either of my clerkships (appellate or district). Employment Law would be very practical but it's not especially complex and you'll quickly pick up on it yourself due to the high volume of employment cases. Otherwise I largely agree except that I might move admin down.Citizen Genet wrote: ↑Tue Aug 05, 2014 5:53 pmIf I were designing 2L and 3L classes specifically around preparing for a clerkship, here is what I would do. I am assuming that your judge has you work on both civil and criminal matters. (That's not true of all judges.)
Definitely Take No Matter What
Federal Courts, Advanced Civil Procedure
Evidence
Statutory Interpretation
Criminal Procedure I (Investigation, covering 4th-5th Amendment)
Criminal Procedure II (Litigation, covering 5th-8th Amendment and procedure)
Conflicts of Law
Remedies
Administrative Law
Employment Law
Definitely Take If You're In A Market With Major Commercial Litigation
Business Associations
Complex Civil Litigation / Class Action Litigation
Try To Fit These In
Civil Rights Litigation (especially if 1983 is not covered in-depth in FedCourts)
Bankruptcy
Intellectual Property*** (if your judge is a patent pilot program judge, then make this a definitely have to take; otherwise, do it if you have the time)
Discovery
First Amendment
Secured Transactions
Securities Regulation and Litigation
That is about 55-62 credits worth of classes. Other clerks, did I miss anything?
My take is, not in any straightforward, predictable way. Maybe the judge loves you and either helps get you a clerkship or hires you. Maybe you don't take one particular "definitely take" classes because of the externship and a judge who requires that class dings you. But overall, I don't think something that entails actual work outside of law school looks worse than a particular class (in other words, I don't think externing looks like filling your schedule with "Law and" seminars).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 7:22 amIs there a meaningful difference in clerkship prospects between taking one of these "definitely take" classes, or getting 4 pass/fail credits for externing with a federal judge during the semester?
Assume I DON'T want to do the internship and would rather just do a class, but am wondering how meaningful the boost (if any) would be from doing itnixy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 8:41 amMy take is, not in any straightforward, predictable way. Maybe the judge loves you and either helps get you a clerkship or hires you. Maybe you don't take one particular "definitely take" classes because of the externship and a judge who requires that class dings you. But overall, I don't think something that entails actual work outside of law school looks worse than a particular class (in other words, I don't think externing looks like filling your schedule with "Law and" seminars).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 7:22 amIs there a meaningful difference in clerkship prospects between taking one of these "definitely take" classes, or getting 4 pass/fail credits for externing with a federal judge during the semester?
Besides, you can take the "definitely take" classes in other semesters. No one's going to have all of them.
the externship looks better than any one class other than fed courts, assuming you have a few of the "definitely takes".Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 9:19 amAssume I DON'T want to do the internship and would rather just do a class, but am wondering how meaningful the boost (if any) would be from doing itnixy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 8:41 amMy take is, not in any straightforward, predictable way. Maybe the judge loves you and either helps get you a clerkship or hires you. Maybe you don't take one particular "definitely take" classes because of the externship and a judge who requires that class dings you. But overall, I don't think something that entails actual work outside of law school looks worse than a particular class (in other words, I don't think externing looks like filling your schedule with "Law and" seminars).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 7:22 amIs there a meaningful difference in clerkship prospects between taking one of these "definitely take" classes, or getting 4 pass/fail credits for externing with a federal judge during the semester?
Besides, you can take the "definitely take" classes in other semesters. No one's going to have all of them.
I’m not as convinced that the internship looks better than any possible class as jotarokujo, but I do think it’s helpful for getting a sense of what clerking is like. It can be potentially very helpful because a good reference from a federal judge is great. But you might not get that (either you’re not that great or the judge is a jerk or you work primarily with the clerks and the judge doesn’t really end up with much to say about you).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 9:19 amAssume I DON'T want to do the internship and would rather just do a class, but am wondering how meaningful the boost (if any) would be from doing itnixy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 8:41 amMy take is, not in any straightforward, predictable way. Maybe the judge loves you and either helps get you a clerkship or hires you. Maybe you don't take one particular "definitely take" classes because of the externship and a judge who requires that class dings you. But overall, I don't think something that entails actual work outside of law school looks worse than a particular class (in other words, I don't think externing looks like filling your schedule with "Law and" seminars).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 7:22 amIs there a meaningful difference in clerkship prospects between taking one of these "definitely take" classes, or getting 4 pass/fail credits for externing with a federal judge during the semester?
Besides, you can take the "definitely take" classes in other semesters. No one's going to have all of them.
Ehh I’d rather see a black-letter class than an externship, I think judges probably have different preferencesjotarokujo wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 9:57 amthe externship looks better than any one class other than fed courts, assuming you have a few of the "definitely takes".Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 9:19 amAssume I DON'T want to do the internship and would rather just do a class, but am wondering how meaningful the boost (if any) would be from doing itnixy wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 8:41 amMy take is, not in any straightforward, predictable way. Maybe the judge loves you and either helps get you a clerkship or hires you. Maybe you don't take one particular "definitely take" classes because of the externship and a judge who requires that class dings you. But overall, I don't think something that entails actual work outside of law school looks worse than a particular class (in other words, I don't think externing looks like filling your schedule with "Law and" seminars).Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 7:22 amIs there a meaningful difference in clerkship prospects between taking one of these "definitely take" classes, or getting 4 pass/fail credits for externing with a federal judge during the semester?
Besides, you can take the "definitely take" classes in other semesters. No one's going to have all of them.
and i wouldn't underestimate how fun/useful externing would be! I mean if you want to clerk, you probably are thinking you would enjoy clerking/think you will get skills from it (unless you are doing it solely for resume). therefore, externing would also be enjoyable/useful skills wise. if you are unsure if you would enjoy clerking, externing is a low cost way of determining that.
yeah fair enough. the grade in the black-letter class also matters, i think i was assuming an average grade like a B or something compared to a Pass in the externship. if both are pass, i would also pick the externship. an A in the black-letter class probably looks better to a lot (most?) of judges than a pass in an externship.Anonymous User wrote: ↑Wed Nov 02, 2022 2:25 pm
Ehh I’d rather see a black-letter class than an externship, I think judges probably have different preferences