^ There are about six of us in section 2... possibly moreLasers wrote: though i personally don't know of anyone that does.

^ There are about six of us in section 2... possibly moreLasers wrote: though i personally don't know of anyone that does.
this is the perfect example of how to make commuting an advantage. well actually, it's a perfect example of how to do well in law school.lisavj wrote:I BART in from Walnut Creek (3 block walk to BART then it's about six steps from BART to the school - I literally have made it to class from a train arriving 5 min before, though I wouldn't advise cutting it that close). I personally love being off campus - it gives me a big picture view of law school. Of course, I waited six years and a separate degree before going back to law school and have a spouse so living near his work was pretty important.JDProspect wrote:Hello 1L's. Thanks for taking the time to respond to prospective Hasting students.
I received a call from admissions today informing me that I'm in. I currently live in Oakland (Lake Merritt), and I hardly ever go into the city, so I don't know much about it. Do you think it would be worth commuting from here?
I find that I get a ton of reading done on BART, whether for class, or just background (prof papers, background reading etc.). Because I have the extra time where I basically just read I found on exams I picked up a bunch of extra points because I had a wide knowledge of the subject matter. The key here will be can you get a seat so you can highlight/take notes. I'm way out in the boonies so I always get one, but if I commuted in from MacArthur I wouldn't...
Of course, I'm biased bc I choose to do this. There have been times on long days (EG with LWR) when I wished I had a bed close by and could take a nap. Of course, because I was stuck on campus I studied. You do need the discipline to try to get stuff done at school so you don't have to take seven freakishly large books home. Also, I tend to wake up around 5:45/6am because I like to get into campus around 7:30/8.
Lockers in the basement of the tower and the 198 building help a ton. (I also try to work out at the tower before I head home because the elliptical is nicer to my knees than pavement).
Hope that helps!
EDIT: my spelling is awfsome
haha, i think like maybe half the section commutes, though from varying distances. i don't personally know anyone from the east bay in our section, which, now that i think about it, is a bit odd. probably my fault for not knowing more people.lisavj wrote:^ There are about six of us in section 2... possibly moreLasers wrote: though i personally don't know of anyone that does.
Thank you all for your input. I used to work in the city a few years ago, but started at 9am (by Montgomery BART). I'm not so much of a morning person, guess I could train to become one? I'm more of a night person/studier though. So it will definitely be an adjustment. For me, the NL (AC transit transbay) would be more convenient as the stop is only a couple of blocks away, but then I would have to muni from SF Transbay station to Hastings. I think it would be too much. I'll try it out when I go visit the campus to see if it's even an option. If not, then I'll look into living at the Towers. I don't have family in Oakland or anything, it's just a matter of comfort, low rent, and the fact that I've lived in this apartment for years.Lasers wrote:this is the perfect example of how to make commuting an advantage. well actually, it's a perfect example of how to do well in law school.lisavj wrote:I BART in from Walnut Creek (3 block walk to BART then it's about six steps from BART to the school - I literally have made it to class from a train arriving 5 min before, though I wouldn't advise cutting it that close). I personally love being off campus - it gives me a big picture view of law school. Of course, I waited six years and a separate degree before going back to law school and have a spouse so living near his work was pretty important.JDProspect wrote:Hello 1L's. Thanks for taking the time to respond to prospective Hasting students.
I received a call from admissions today informing me that I'm in. I currently live in Oakland (Lake Merritt), and I hardly ever go into the city, so I don't know much about it. Do you think it would be worth commuting from here?
I find that I get a ton of reading done on BART, whether for class, or just background (prof papers, background reading etc.). Because I have the extra time where I basically just read I found on exams I picked up a bunch of extra points because I had a wide knowledge of the subject matter. The key here will be can you get a seat so you can highlight/take notes. I'm way out in the boonies so I always get one, but if I commuted in from MacArthur I wouldn't...
Of course, I'm biased bc I choose to do this. There have been times on long days (EG with LWR) when I wished I had a bed close by and could take a nap. Of course, because I was stuck on campus I studied. You do need the discipline to try to get stuff done at school so you don't have to take seven freakishly large books home. Also, I tend to wake up around 5:45/6am because I like to get into campus around 7:30/8.
Lockers in the basement of the tower and the 198 building help a ton. (I also try to work out at the tower before I head home because the elliptical is nicer to my knees than pavement).
Hope that helps!
EDIT: my spelling is awfsome
i for one cannot manage such a disciplined schedule; i sleep at 3 and wake up as late as possible. were i forced to commute, i would probably have flunked out.
JDProspect, if you're as lazy as i am, or if you anticipate any problems commuting, i would think long and hard about it before committing to such a plan. if you're more structured/able to wake up before 7 for morning classes, i think lisa provides a blueprint to being successful while commuting.
I only live like 15 blocks away, but I know a bunch of people who commute from the east bay and don't have a problem with it. I wake up at 6:45 every morning because I have class at 8:30 this semester, and I have to feed my dog, make coffee, eat breakfast, etc. I used to NEVER be a morning person. I used to sleep in through class every day in college (explains the poor gpa!), sleep till noon on weekends, and go to sleep at 3am. I love my sleep. Law school makes you change a lot about your habits. I am definitely more of a morning person now. Even on weekends I wake up at around 8 am because I don't want to ruin my schedule. I'm also much more productive now in the mornings than I am at night. Anyway, I'm saying this to let you know that you can definitely train to become a morning person. It just involves practice and coffee.JDProspect wrote: Thank you all for your input. I used to work in the city a few years ago, but started at 9am (by Montgomery BART). I'm not so much of a morning person, guess I could train to become one? I'm more of a night person/studier though. So it will definitely be an adjustment. For me, the NL (AC transit transbay) would be more convenient as the stop is only a couple of blocks away, but then I would have to muni from SF Transbay station to Hastings. I think it would be too much. I'll try it out when I go visit the campus to see if it's even an option. If not, then I'll look into living at the Towers. I don't have family in Oakland or anything, it's just a matter of comfort, low rent, and the fact that I've lived in this apartment for years.
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FWIW I was a total night owl pre law skool...ilovesf wrote: Anyway, I'm saying this to let you know that you can definitely train to become a morning person. It just involves practice and coffee.
I think most students are not traditional k-jd students.aliceydu wrote:Hi! I got the acceptance call from Hastings a couple of days ago, so I'll be lurking around here.
So what's the "traditional student" anyway? I read the average age is 24, so a traditional student isn't really someone who's just finished their undergrad right?
Also, anything worth reading for the summer before law school? I'm not talking about those I-want-a-head-start, academic books. I just feel like I don't know much about law school (or anything for that matter)... just something interesting and not too heavy.
Thanks ^^
Congratulations!aliceydu wrote:Hi! I got the acceptance call from Hastings a couple of days ago, so I'll be lurking around here.
So what's the "traditional student" anyway? I read the average age is 24, so a traditional student isn't really someone who's just finished their undergrad right?
Also, anything worth reading for the summer before law school? I'm not talking about those I-want-a-head-start, academic books. I just feel like I don't know much about law school (or anything for that matter)... just something interesting and not too heavy.
Thanks ^^
Hm, I like the coffee - so measure my advice by that standard. I also like Starbucks. A few thoughts:Mhyst wrote: What do you know or have learned now that you wish somebody told you on your first day as a Hastings student? Any words of wisdom, be it the "don't drink the coffee here" (which made me laugh) to the "AVOID AT ALL COSTS" variety is kindly accepted.
Sorry to have misled you! I don't get all of my work done at school - I'm actually waiting for my brief to finish printing for a final review as I type this. However, I try to take as little home as possible, and during the first semester things only really came home over the weekends when I was getting towards finals. Now that I'm in second semester I bring more home, but still have threeish evenings without anything and at least one day over the weekend (got back today from a trip to Tahoe over the long weekend where I did all of about an hour of work). Right now I'm home at around 6/6:30p MWF, home 9p on Tues, and we volunteer together at our church on Thursday evenings.Mhyst wrote: Also, I like how you get all of your work done at school. How late do you find yourself staying on campus? How have you managed to, well, manage the home life with the law student life?
Congrats on your acceptance! I guess I haven't learned that much that I hadn't already figured out by looking through previous threads before school started, I just wish I had listened to advice! I would have definitely fixed my resume and written cover letters before school started. I also would have set up appointments with the career office early to go over them and not wait until December was almost here. I applied to things much earlier than everyone else, and it really paid off. What I really want to emphasis to everyone coming is to DO THOSE THINGS EARLY, so you can concentrate on school later on. Seriously. For coffee, Phils on Van Ness is my absolute favorite. It's kind of expensive and a couple of blocks away, but sooo good. They are opening one one block away but I'm not sure when. The coffee in the law cafe sucks, but it's so convenient that I end up drinking it daily. The food there is also pretty subpar, but I also eat there because I'm lazy. I'm trying hard to bring my lunch to school, but I never end up cooking anything the night before (because once again, I'm lazy.)Mhyst wrote: My question is: What do you know or have learned now that you wish somebody told you on your first day as a Hastings student? Any words of wisdom, be it the "don't drink the coffee here" (which made me laugh) to the "AVOID AT ALL COSTS" variety is kindly accepted.
I try to get to campus at 8:10 (I have class at 8:30) and I usually stay until around 5. I usually finish up most things at school so I don't have to work at home. There is usually a couple hours between classes, so make the most of this time and try to be productive. This semester there is SO much more work like lisa said, mostly because of moot court. Second semester definitely isn't as much fun as the first.Mhyst wrote:Also, I like how you get all of your work done at school. How late do you find yourself staying on campus? How have you managed to, well, manage the home life with the law student life?
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totally agree.ilovesf wrote: This semester there is SO much more work like lisa said, mostly because of moot court. Second semester definitely isn't as much fun as the first.
I agree too.Lasers wrote:totally agree.ilovesf wrote: This semester there is SO much more work like lisa said, mostly because of moot court. Second semester definitely isn't as much fun as the first.
and the first semester isn't that much fun to begin with.
First, don't worry. The acceptance phone call is amazing and you'll receive your package.aliceydu wrote:I got my phone call over a week ago, and still haven't received my package in the mail yet. I'M SO ANXIOUS! I'm so scared he called me by accident!
How long did everyone wait before you got your package? I'm going to call them tomorrow just to make sure.
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yes, they are stingy.odetojefferson wrote:Do you guys have any experience with Hastings negotiating financial aid? Are they stingy with scholarships as I have heard?
Haven't gotten my package, and Hastings is my top choice, but it's difficult to tell my parents I would turn down 60k at UC-Irvine.
I don't know, I kind of disagree with some of this. LWR definitely isn't as important as your gpa, I would never say otherwise. I definitely wouldn't say you should work on it at the expense of other classes, but I think you should put a lot of effort into it. I worked pretty hard on my memo and got an A- in the class. The lowest grade in my section was a B- I think. Only 1 person got an A, and 3 people got an A-, the rest got under.kapital98 wrote: I agree too.
My one take home point of first semester at Hastings is this: Don't focus too much on Legal Writing & Analysis. There are people who spend entire days trying to find the "perfect" case. At the end of the week, after everyone has done their research, the professor or TA will give you all of the relevant cases.
I focused almost exclusively on doctrinal classes that counted towards my GPA. LWR grades have a letter but don't count towards your GPA. Do the least amount of work that will get you a "good" grade. Also, the grading distribution is completely distorted in LWR. Most classes have 30-60% A's even though the professor says he can only give ~20%. The lowest grade in my LWR class was a "B."![]()
I know people who spent entire days trying to impress the professor and it was almost a complete waste of time. Almost half the people I know thought their LWR class was possibly their most important grade! This is my primary "don't drink the kool-aid" tip.
(--LinkRemoved--).
The same goes for moot court. Get in, get out, and keep focused on the courses that matter. Law school is so busy as it is that you don't have time for pointless exercises. Keep your eye on the prize: FINAL EXAMS!
I expected there would be disagreement. IMHO, too many people did put their memos ahead of their GPA courses. There is only so much time in the day and every hour you put towards your memo is an hour lost studying for GPA courses. I was really surprised by how much time people spent on LWR.ilovesf wrote:I don't know, I kind of disagree with some of this. LWR definitely isn't as important as your gpa, I would never say otherwise. I definitely wouldn't say you should work on it at the expense of other classes, but I think you should put a lot of effort into it. I worked pretty hard on my memo and got an A- in the class. The lowest grade in my section was a B- I think. Only 1 person got an A, and 3 people got an A-, the rest got under.kapital98 wrote: I agree too.
My one take home point of first semester at Hastings is this: Don't focus too much on Legal Writing & Analysis. There are people who spend entire days trying to find the "perfect" case. At the end of the week, after everyone has done their research, the professor or TA will give you all of the relevant cases.
I focused almost exclusively on doctrinal classes that counted towards my GPA. LWR grades have a letter but don't count towards your GPA. Do the least amount of work that will get you a "good" grade. Also, the grading distribution is completely distorted in LWR. Most classes have 30-60% A's even though the professor says he can only give ~20%. The lowest grade in my LWR class was a "B."![]()
I know people who spent entire days trying to impress the professor and it was almost a complete waste of time. Almost half the people I know thought their LWR class was possibly their most important grade! This is my primary "don't drink the kool-aid" tip.
(--LinkRemoved--).
The same goes for moot court. Get in, get out, and keep focused on the courses that matter. Law school is so busy as it is that you don't have time for pointless exercises. Keep your eye on the prize: FINAL EXAMS!
I think your LWR grade can really impact what you do for your 1L summer. Most people say what you do your 1L summer doesn't matter, which is probably true. But if there is something you really want to do, like work for a judge, your writing sample is REALLY important. If anything, I'm happy I worked hard on LWR because I now have a great writing sample. In my interview with a judge both the judge and the clerks went through my writing sample and made comments on it and asked me questions. They said one of the reasons they asked me in was because I had a good sample.
Also, LWR professors are some of the best references you can get. They have real jobs outside of being your LWR professor - mine was a staff attorney for the CA Court of Appeal. It is great to have someone who can speak to your writing on your reference list, and really important to have someone from LS on your references. It's also great to have a good relationship with someone who has connections and can help you get a job. My moot court professor right now is hooking up someone else in my section with an interview at the cal doj.
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kapital98 wrote: Full Disclosure: I got a B+ on my first memo and then a B on my second memo ("B" overall.) I openly told the professor, "LWR isn't important to me. All I want is a decent grade." That was REALLY STUPID. My grade was right on the edge of a B+/B and I'm sure my professor had no moral qualms over giving me a "B."
congrats.sienna.ann wrote:Hi! I just got my acceptance last week and wanted to ask about the competitiveness that so many people talk about at Hastings. Is it really competitive and difficult to make friends?
( I know that any law school will have a sense of competition to it, but I just wanted to see how bad it is at Hastings).
I think people are super friendly, it hasn't been a problem. I'm a local so a lot of my friends aren't from LS, so I don't spend as much time with fellow students. I still really like everyone though. It's competitive, but all law schools are competitive. It isn't like rumors where people say "people rip out pages of books and hide things." also, we don't even use books anymore so it doesn't matter.Lasers wrote:congrats.sienna.ann wrote:Hi! I just got my acceptance last week and wanted to ask about the competitiveness that so many people talk about at Hastings. Is it really competitive and difficult to make friends?
( I know that any law school will have a sense of competition to it, but I just wanted to see how bad it is at Hastings).
it's very easy to make friends...seriously. i'm not the most social person, but i have a close group of friends and i always say hi or wave to other people in my section/other sections/2Ls/3Ls even if i only talked to them a couple of times before. whenever i miss class, people are always willing to send me their notes. just be nice.
as for competition, however, it's definitely there. everyone wants the same thing, but that doesn't mean people will be dicks about it, either.
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