Thaks for that. Even w/out any formal experience in finance or IB? Thank youHLSstudent wrote:I agree the JD in a JD/MBA doesn't add much for IB. But, you can definitely get IB for 2L summer or full-time with just a JD if you put a bit of effort into it.tomwatts wrote:theventriloquist wrote:This is not something I know a lot about, but if you want to work in IB, I don't think that the JD does you any good. Just get an MBA.theventriloquist wrote:Also, do u think that JD/MBA would be good job-wise? I'd like to work in IB, but I can't get into the business school. I imagine that JD/MBA would be good to open doors in the top place.
Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions Forum
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theventriloquist

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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
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theventriloquist

- Posts: 154
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Also, I have heard HSL and other T6 schools have good courses in business that law students can take. Are the business courses at HSL very quantitive? And would, say, IB/PE firms consider those courses? (I want to break into IB through law school. As I don't have the stats for a M10, but have a chance at T6). Thank you again for all your hlep.
- radio1nowhere

- Posts: 467
- Joined: Mon Jan 19, 2015 7:01 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Bro, you have posts from earlier this week about how your experience with cancer made you want to go to law school to do bio research..? Leaving aside this and the whole issue that going to law school to "break into IB" makes no sense, you're very unlikely to get into HLS anyway with your 2.9 UGPA and — quite honestly — relatively poor command of English. There's no chance of you getting into HBS with zero business/industry experience and those grades. Take the advice of the people who replied to your "What are my chances?" post; you're not going to help yourself fishing for answers you like more in other threads.theventriloquist wrote:Also, I have heard HSL and other T6 schools have good courses in business that law students can take. Are the business courses at HSL very quantitive? And would, say, IB/PE firms consider those courses? (I want to break into IB through law school. As I don't have the stats for a M10, but have a chance at T6). Thank you again for all your hlep.
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theventriloquist

- Posts: 154
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
I did, they said I have a shot at T6 ok? I was asking a general question about the finance and businesses courses at law schools. So what is the problem?radio1nowhere wrote:Bro, you have posts from earlier this week about how your experience with cancer made you want to go to law school to do bio research..? Leaving aside this and the whole issue that going to law school to "break into IB" makes no sense, you're very unlikely to get into HLS anyway with your 2.9 UGPA and — quite honestly — relatively poor command of English. There's no chance of you getting into HBS with zero business/industry experience and those grades. Take the advice of the people who replied to your "What are my chances?" post; you're not going to help yourself fishing for answers you like more in other threads.theventriloquist wrote:Also, I have heard HSL and other T6 schools have good courses in business that law students can take. Are the business courses at HSL very quantitive? And would, say, IB/PE firms consider those courses? (I want to break into IB through law school. As I don't have the stats for a M10, but have a chance at T6). Thank you again for all your hlep.
- radio1nowhere

- Posts: 467
- Joined: Mon Jan 19, 2015 7:01 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
My post wasn't in response to that specifically, but rather in response to the numerous posts you've been spamming across a bunch of threads (though not the post where you ask whether women at BC are "easy to fuck"). But to answer your question: No, of course law school business courses don't give you heavy quant. They're law school courses.theventriloquist wrote:I did, they said I have a shot at T6 ok? I was asking a general question about the finance and businesses courses at law schools. So what is the problem?radio1nowhere wrote:Bro, you have posts from earlier this week about how your experience with cancer made you want to go to law school to do bio research..? Leaving aside this and the whole issue that going to law school to "break into IB" makes no sense, you're very unlikely to get into HLS anyway with your 2.9 UGPA and — quite honestly — relatively poor command of English. There's no chance of you getting into HBS with zero business/industry experience and those grades. Take the advice of the people who replied to your "What are my chances?" post; you're not going to help yourself fishing for answers you like more in other threads.theventriloquist wrote:Also, I have heard HSL and other T6 schools have good courses in business that law students can take. Are the business courses at HSL very quantitive? And would, say, IB/PE firms consider those courses? (I want to break into IB through law school. As I don't have the stats for a M10, but have a chance at T6). Thank you again for all your hlep.
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- tangers91

- Posts: 6
- Joined: Tue May 08, 2012 10:21 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Hey all. I just received my timeslot for room selection on May 9th (1st day of selection for incoming JDs) and it is the very last time on that day (21:00). In your opinion, how releastic do you think it is that a room in North will be available? Thanks in advance!
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neptunian

- Posts: 16
- Joined: Thu Oct 20, 2016 7:17 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
To piggyback off the previous question, I got a 19:00 slot. Should I expect to get a not so ideal type I room in Gropius? Will we get the floorplan before the room pick?
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tomwatts

- Posts: 1710
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Vaguely remembering from a few years back... I think that a few rooms in North and a fair number of Type I and II rooms in Gropius were available as of fairly late in the selection process. I think singles in Hastings (the really expensive kind) were also still available. Not much else was. The larger rooms in Gropius (Type III and up) tend to go pretty early.
You have access to floorplans now, I think. Google hls gropius and you get a page with a link to floorplans.
You have access to floorplans now, I think. Google hls gropius and you get a page with a link to floorplans.
- tangers91

- Posts: 6
- Joined: Tue May 08, 2012 10:21 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Good to hear, and thanks for the input. I'm a pretty big guy so I think Gropius I and II is just out of the question, so fingers crossed for Hastings or North.tomwatts wrote:Vaguely remembering from a few years back... I think that a few rooms in North and a fair number of Type I and II rooms in Gropius were available as of fairly late in the selection process. I think singles in Hastings (the really expensive kind) were also still available. Not much else was. The larger rooms in Gropius (Type III and up) tend to go pretty early.
You have access to floorplans now, I think. Google hls gropius and you get a page with a link to floorplans.
- xn3345

- Posts: 91
- Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2016 10:49 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Would any Harvard students, preferably someone that went straight through from undergrad as I will be, be willing to talk to me on the phone? I'm on Harvard's waitlist and currently committed to Chicago. If I get an offer, I'll have to decide in 24 hours. I haven't been able to talk to any Harvard students, so some negative stereotypes have a huge influence on how I imagine life at HLS. I spent nearly three full days at Chicago's ASW. That dispelled all of the stereotypes I had heard about Chicago. If someone would be willing to talk to me about their experience at HLS for a while, I would be so grateful. I'm operating on so little concrete information. It would be such a relief to have the perspective of someone actually spending time there. If you're feeling extremely generous or want to procrastinate, send me a PM. It would mean a lot.
- taxman14

- Posts: 504
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
WHen do we get our schedules?
- Pneumonia

- Posts: 2096
- Joined: Sun Jul 29, 2012 3:05 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
taxman14 wrote:WHen do we get our schedules?
As I remember it, sometime in early- to mid- August.
- taxman14

- Posts: 504
- Joined: Sun Mar 08, 2015 8:04 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
thx!Pneumonia wrote:taxman14 wrote:WHen do we get our schedules?
As I remember it, sometime in early- to mid- August.
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ThrowawayPanda11

- Posts: 1
- Joined: Mon May 08, 2017 12:26 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
According to http://hls.harvard.edu/dept/dos/housing ... s-complex/ the listed gender designations for gropius were last updated August 2015... Have any of the floor/bathroom gender designations for gropius have changed since then? Thanks!
- EnderWiggin

- Posts: 1217
- Joined: Wed Nov 12, 2014 9:55 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
For the 1Ls this year it was August 10thtaxman14 wrote:WHen do we get our schedules?
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lawlorbust

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- polareagle

- Posts: 336
- Joined: Mon Jun 21, 2010 2:04 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
No. They put that language there because August 2015 was the first time they were updated since . . . I don't know, whenever the law school went coed.ThrowawayPanda11 wrote:According to http://hls.harvard.edu/dept/dos/housing ... s-complex/ the listed gender designations for gropius were last updated August 2015... Have any of the floor/bathroom gender designations for gropius have changed since then? Thanks!
Post-2015, the Gropius floor plans online used to have the bathrooms listed incorrectly (because they were image files that were hard to update). I don't know if they've corrected them now. (That part of the website is closed down to alumni.)
There was talk at one point about making all/most of the bathrooms gender neutral, but they would definitely have announced that prior to you selecting rooms.
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- Joscellin

- Posts: 1515
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
I honest to god feel really bad for her.
Can you imagine being a 1L and knowing that your first coldcall flub is likely to get plastered all over the news (or at least ATL)?
I mean, she's obviously got more to deal with than just that, but damn...
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theventriloquist

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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Hey, does anyone know, what percent of students from HLS go into non-law carrears, by choice? Like, not the ones who can't get a law job, but the ones who choose a non-law job like Finance or consulting? Thanks
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tomwatts

- Posts: 1710
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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
I quickly Googled and came up with recent employment data showing that the class of 2016, 10 months out, had about 5% of people (29 out of 588) employed in "Business & Industry." In a different portion of the data, 34 grads were in "JD Advantage" jobs (i.e., jobs that the employer would prefer to fill with someone who has a law degree but the job doesn't specifically require a lawyer) and 3 were in "Professional Position" (which I gather means that they don't care whether you're a lawyer or not). I would assume that anyone going into finance/consulting would be in the "Professional Position" category — but I'm surprised it's as low as 3 people. I would've expected higher.theventriloquist wrote:Hey, does anyone know, what percent of students from HLS go into non-law carrears, by choice? Like, not the ones who can't get a law job, but the ones who choose a non-law job like Finance or consulting? Thanks
I personally knew four people who were going into non-law jobs (spread out across several class years). One was going into consulting. Of the other three, the jobs they said they were getting were: high school teacher, software engineer, and — well, I don't actually know what he meant, but he said he was going to play video games for a living, and he got a job at Blizzard.
And I knew a lot of people going into policy jobs, but I consider those essentially law jobs even if they're not exactly "the practice of law" per se.
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lawlorbust

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Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
I'm pretty sure MBB/banking are categorized as "JD advantage" positions. That said, 34 is shockingly high (even if before you subtract out the JD/MBAs), compared to my baseline expectations of what that number would be.tomwatts wrote:I quickly Googled and came up with recent employment data showing that the class of 2016, 10 months out, had about 5% of people (29 out of 588) employed in "Business & Industry." In a different portion of the data, 34 grads were in "JD Advantage" jobs (i.e., jobs that the employer would prefer to fill with someone who has a law degree but the job doesn't specifically require a lawyer) and 3 were in "Professional Position" (which I gather means that they don't care whether you're a lawyer or not). I would assume that anyone going into finance/consulting would be in the "Professional Position" category — but I'm surprised it's as low as 3 people. I would've expected higher.theventriloquist wrote:Hey, does anyone know, what percent of students from HLS go into non-law carrears, by choice? Like, not the ones who can't get a law job, but the ones who choose a non-law job like Finance or consulting? Thanks
I personally knew four people who were going into non-law jobs (spread out across several class years). One was going into consulting. Of the other three, the jobs they said they were getting were: high school teacher, software engineer, and — well, I don't actually know what he meant, but he said he was going to play video games for a living, and he got a job at Blizzard.
And I knew a lot of people going into policy jobs, but I consider those essentially law jobs even if they're not exactly "the practice of law" per se.
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- nothingtosee

- Posts: 958
- Joined: Tue May 03, 2011 12:08 am
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
I mean, we graduate like 600 students per year.lawlorbust wrote:I'm pretty sure MBB/banking are categorized as "JD advantage" positions. That said, 34 is shockingly high (even if before you subtract out the JD/MBAs), compared to my baseline expectations of what that number would be.tomwatts wrote:I quickly Googled and came up with recent employment data showing that the class of 2016, 10 months out, had about 5% of people (29 out of 588) employed in "Business & Industry." In a different portion of the data, 34 grads were in "JD Advantage" jobs (i.e., jobs that the employer would prefer to fill with someone who has a law degree but the job doesn't specifically require a lawyer) and 3 were in "Professional Position" (which I gather means that they don't care whether you're a lawyer or not). I would assume that anyone going into finance/consulting would be in the "Professional Position" category — but I'm surprised it's as low as 3 people. I would've expected higher.theventriloquist wrote:Hey, does anyone know, what percent of students from HLS go into non-law carrears, by choice? Like, not the ones who can't get a law job, but the ones who choose a non-law job like Finance or consulting? Thanks
I personally knew four people who were going into non-law jobs (spread out across several class years). One was going into consulting. Of the other three, the jobs they said they were getting were: high school teacher, software engineer, and — well, I don't actually know what he meant, but he said he was going to play video games for a living, and he got a job at Blizzard.
And I knew a lot of people going into policy jobs, but I consider those essentially law jobs even if they're not exactly "the practice of law" per se.
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theventriloquist

- Posts: 154
- Joined: Wed Apr 19, 2017 2:25 am
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Thanks for that info.tomwatts wrote:I quickly Googled and came up with recent employment data showing that the class of 2016, 10 months out, had about 5% of people (29 out of 588) employed in "Business & Industry." In a different portion of the data, 34 grads were in "JD Advantage" jobs (i.e., jobs that the employer would prefer to fill with someone who has a law degree but the job doesn't specifically require a lawyer) and 3 were in "Professional Position" (which I gather means that they don't care whether you're a lawyer or not). I would assume that anyone going into finance/consulting would be in the "Professional Position" category — but I'm surprised it's as low as 3 people. I would've expected higher.theventriloquist wrote:Hey, does anyone know, what percent of students from HLS go into non-law carrears, by choice? Like, not the ones who can't get a law job, but the ones who choose a non-law job like Finance or consulting? Thanks
I personally knew four people who were going into non-law jobs (spread out across several class years). One was going into consulting. Of the other three, the jobs they said they were getting were: high school teacher, software engineer, and — well, I don't actually know what he meant, but he said he was going to play video games for a living, and he got a job at Blizzard.
And I knew a lot of people going into policy jobs, but I consider those essentially law jobs even if they're not exactly "the practice of law" per se.
- TripTrip

- Posts: 2767
- Joined: Fri Sep 07, 2012 9:52 am
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
Must be. There are nine people just in my first degree connections on LinkedIn from c/o 2016 who work at MBB.lawlorbust wrote:I'm pretty sure MBB/banking are categorized as "JD advantage" positions. That said, 34 is shockingly high (even if before you subtract out the JD/MBAs), compared to my baseline expectations of what that number would be.
Mostly we do it for the SPG points and the Chase Sapphire card, but happy to answer any other questions about the switch.
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alpinespring

- Posts: 97
- Joined: Tue Feb 21, 2017 2:59 pm
Re: Harvard Student(s) Answering Your Questions
How did you guys answer the "Why Harvard Law" question during the Skype interview?
I looked at the HLS website -- fairly typical stuff that could be applied to any other top law school...
What distinguishes HLS from other peer schools? (besides large class size, location, etc)
What's really, really unique about HLS?
Thank you
I looked at the HLS website -- fairly typical stuff that could be applied to any other top law school...
What distinguishes HLS from other peer schools? (besides large class size, location, etc)
What's really, really unique about HLS?
Thank you
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