Will I be a PRACTICING attorney?
Posted: Sat Sep 07, 2013 12:03 am
Hello everyone,
I would like to start off by thanking anyone who comments for their time and honesty.
I am looking to to enter into law school next year so that I may become a patent attorney. A little about me, my undergraduate degree was in biology, and then I received a M.S. in molecular biology from Purdue University. I have worked at a Pharmaceutical company for three years as a microbiologist, and I have worked two and a half years as a patent agent for a law firm that primarily deals with medical devices.
I have observed on countless threads that a PhD is the must have in order to be a patent attorney since I have gone the way of the "lesser science field-bio". MY QUESTION: Is my advanced degree and work experience enough for me to be able to actually land a job when I get out of law school (assuming I do well)? Or is it truly no point in trying unless I get those three extra letters? The fear of wasting time and money has been put in me in a big way due to some of the posts I have seen damning anything below a phd in biotech fields. So, I just wanted to know how my credentials stacked up. Please be brutally honest, and I value your opinion. If you need to know anything else about my back ground please ask.
-cheers
I would like to start off by thanking anyone who comments for their time and honesty.
I am looking to to enter into law school next year so that I may become a patent attorney. A little about me, my undergraduate degree was in biology, and then I received a M.S. in molecular biology from Purdue University. I have worked at a Pharmaceutical company for three years as a microbiologist, and I have worked two and a half years as a patent agent for a law firm that primarily deals with medical devices.
I have observed on countless threads that a PhD is the must have in order to be a patent attorney since I have gone the way of the "lesser science field-bio". MY QUESTION: Is my advanced degree and work experience enough for me to be able to actually land a job when I get out of law school (assuming I do well)? Or is it truly no point in trying unless I get those three extra letters? The fear of wasting time and money has been put in me in a big way due to some of the posts I have seen damning anything below a phd in biotech fields. So, I just wanted to know how my credentials stacked up. Please be brutally honest, and I value your opinion. If you need to know anything else about my back ground please ask.
-cheers