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Educational background and transactional law
Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2012 10:57 am
by AllDangle
I majored in CJ during college. However, my interests in law fall into transactional practice. I have been reading as much as I can about securities, financial markets, etc., which is genuinely interesting to me. However, would the CJ degree make this a hard sell since I won't have the option to take transactional related classes prior to 2L OCI? Or will grades/school trump that? I imagine a firm would train and teach someone the ropes for whatever practice group they are in, but will someone interviewing me look down on the fact I don't have a finance/business background?
Re: Educational background and transactional law
Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2012 11:01 am
by de5igual
the vast majority of people going into transactional law don't even know what a financial statement is. you'll be fine.
Re: Educational background and transactional law
Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2012 11:44 am
by AllDangle
f0bolous wrote:the vast majority of people going into transactional law don't even know what a financial statement is. you'll be fine.
Thanks for the input. Displaying a legitimate interest during interviews should be enough then (obviously grades also)?
Re: Educational background and transactional law
Posted: Thu Oct 11, 2012 2:44 pm
by de5igual
AllDangle wrote:f0bolous wrote:the vast majority of people going into transactional law don't even know what a financial statement is. you'll be fine.
Thanks for the input. Displaying a legitimate interest during interviews should be enough then (obviously grades also)?
Yes, but grades matter far more than interest.
Re: Educational background and transactional law
Posted: Tue Oct 16, 2012 12:11 am
by dukeblue
f0bolous wrote:AllDangle wrote:f0bolous wrote:the vast majority of people going into transactional law don't even know what a financial statement is. you'll be fine.
Thanks for the input. Displaying a legitimate interest during interviews should be enough then (obviously grades also)?
Yes, but grades matter far more than interest.
TITCR.