Notre Dame Student(s) Taking Questions
Posted: Fri Oct 04, 2013 10:07 pm
Ask away...
Law School Discussion Forums
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/
https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=4&t=217592
awesome, thank you. And I just saw you answered my question on the other thread so thanks for that too.ndirish2010 wrote:I only knew two people who were gunning for Boston in my class and they both got it, but they were both on LR. They had ties to New England (attended BC and PC, respectively). I got a callback at Goodwin without any significant Boston ties (one year at BC before transferring in undergrad). It's definitely possible, but I think you'd need to be at least top 20%ish.
I recall by looking at their employment data that California is the #2 state that grads take jobs in, barely behind Illinois and still ahead of Indiana. I think you should be able to find a good job out there with a ND Law degree. I'm also looking to possible take a job in California due to my interest in patent law.bdogbb wrote:I've visited the Campus, I love the place and I would love to go there, but I'm from Southern California and I pretty much have to end up back here after law school because of family care issues. Anyhow, does ND have any reach back here, or would a ND law degree be a one way ticket to the eastern half of the country?
Thanks for the perspective. Appreciate it.ndirish2010 wrote:Students can technically be expelled for having sex, yes. However, I don't think any Notre Dame students can remember the last time that happened. When I was an undergrad, I did hear of one student who received a punishment from ResLife for having sex in a dorm (because it was reported by his pissed-off roommate), but that student was not expelled.
If you read du Lac, you will probably find a lot of things that seem a bit over the top, but are rarely enforced and could never be legally enforced off campus anyway.
90%? I mean, there are always people who look at law school as an extension of college. By and large, however, people at NDLS take law school seriously. That number obviously decreases, especially for people in the bottom half of the class, for 2L and 3L years.yossarian71 wrote:Thanks for the perspective. Appreciate it.ndirish2010 wrote:Students can technically be expelled for having sex, yes. However, I don't think any Notre Dame students can remember the last time that happened. When I was an undergrad, I did hear of one student who received a punishment from ResLife for having sex in a dorm (because it was reported by his pissed-off roommate), but that student was not expelled.
If you read du Lac, you will probably find a lot of things that seem a bit over the top, but are rarely enforced and could never be legally enforced off campus anyway.
...
What percentage of 1Ls would you say take their studies seriously and try hard? I know this is a silly question. But, I am interested for a few reasons.
1) I want to be surrounded by people who take their studies seriously, and there has been a popular suggestion that many T1 (non T14) schools do not.
2) Similarly, I've heard arguments that the chances for BigLaw/Clerkship at T1 schools aren't as bad as the numbers indicate if you factor that you are probably only actually competing against people who take their first year seriously.
Again, I know there is a level of ridiculousness to this question. Just interested to get a student perspective.
Confirms what I expected. Thanks.ndirish2010 wrote:
90%? I mean, there are always people who look at law school as an extension of college. By and large, however, people at NDLS take law school seriously. That number obviously decreases, especially for people in the bottom half of the class, for 2L and 3L years.
I was blown away by our clerkship numbers for the class of 2014. Think 6-10+ fed cir. clerks, including a couple in major feeders. This is in a class of 180. ND crushes any of its peers when it comes to placing students in conservative chambers.CJ2017 wrote:How is the placement in DC for summer externships/internships? How does ND do with clerkships?
For my class (2014) there were a boatload of pretty large Midwest firms. There were a lot of NY, CA etc. as well, but what struck me was how firms from all over the region converged. My class also rebounded in a huge way from the classes of 2011-2013, which I would guess had 12-20% big law. My class is much closer to 40%. That said, the most common (successful) job search story you hear is someone from the middle of nowhere who goes back there, and those positions typically don't happen through OCI. That said, firms from Montana or rural Ohio wouldn't come to OCI at Yale, so if you want one of those jobs you won't get it through OCI anywhere.mx23250 wrote:How substantial is the number of OCI firms? It may be hard to compare this to other comparable schools in the midwest, but do you feel there's plenty of top firms looking to hire you for summer or post-grad employment? How easy/difficult is it to get a good summer position at a firm through these OCI? Thanks!
Your class was unbelievable as far as clerkships go. In my class (2013) we only had three circuit clerks and no feeders, but not as many people were as interested in clerking. 2014 was just amazing though.andythefir wrote:I was blown away by our clerkship numbers for the class of 2014. Think 6-10+ fed cir. clerks, including a couple in major feeders. This is in a class of 180. ND crushes any of its peers when it comes to placing students in conservative chambers.CJ2017 wrote:How is the placement in DC for summer externships/internships? How does ND do with clerkships?
As for DC, I knew several people there for externships and for jobs. I think you need pretty good grades, but it's definitely possible.
Wow!! That's VERY impressive!! I'm really looking forward to the AWS in March! It's pretty clear ND has an excellent national reputation. Thanks for the info!andythefir wrote:For my class (2014) there were a boatload of pretty large Midwest firms. There were a lot of NY, CA etc. as well, but what struck me was how firms from all over the region converged. My class also rebounded in a huge way from the classes of 2011-2013, which I would guess had 12-20% big law. My class is much closer to 40%. That said, the most common (successful) job search story you hear is someone from the middle of nowhere who goes back there, and those positions typically don't happen through OCI. That said, firms from Montana or rural Ohio wouldn't come to OCI at Yale, so if you want one of those jobs you won't get it through OCI anywhere.mx23250 wrote:How substantial is the number of OCI firms? It may be hard to compare this to other comparable schools in the midwest, but do you feel there's plenty of top firms looking to hire you for summer or post-grad employment? How easy/difficult is it to get a good summer position at a firm through these OCI? Thanks!
The alumni are the best. Sent out several cold emails to people at firms and they took the time to write long, detailed responses (eventually talked on the phone to a few of them, including a former clerk of a judge I was targeting). I got my 1L job (judicial internship with a double domer state CoA judge) and my clerkship (with a NDLS alum district judge) entirely because of ND. It also didn't hurt for my applications to conservative/libertarian public interest firms (one of which I'll be going to as a fellow after my clerkship).John Everyman wrote:How do Chicago firms generally treat ND students in competition with Northwestern and UChi grads? Am I likely to get crushed up against them if I went to ND even if my numbers are overall better than those students'?
Also, do the domer alumni generally live up to their rep? Meaning, how many people tend to get jobs/foot in the door through alumni resources? and also on that note, how hard does ND work to put you in touch with alumni lawyers?