Unfinished Graduate Degree
Posted: Thu Jun 15, 2017 4:44 pm
Is there any harm in not finishing a graduate degree when it comes to employment? I'm looking at big law specifically. Will employers even care?
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Depends on what kind of law school you're at.sluggla wrote:Is there any harm in not finishing a graduate degree when it comes to employment? I'm looking at big law specifically. Will employers even care?
I guess I figured I would at least have a line on my resume about it so there isn't a two year gap.cavalier1138 wrote:I don't see why you'd report this to employers...
But schools might be a little concerned about you dropping out of a grad program.
T-13 and it would be not finishing a masters degree. Yeah this is what I was afraid of.SmokeytheBear wrote:Depends on what kind of law school you're at.sluggla wrote:Is there any harm in not finishing a graduate degree when it comes to employment? I'm looking at big law specifically. Will employers even care?
I have two friends from my t-13 who had slightly above median grades, who had both gotten almost all the way through their PhD at a very good school in a liberal art, who both struck out at OCI, while others with similar grades etc had call backs up the wazoo. I'm guessing employers saw it as lack of dedication or just bouncing around and feared that they would jump ship or just do the summer for funsies.
I don't know why you'd do that. If you didn't finish the program, including it raises far more questions than a gap on your resume.sluggla wrote:I guess I figured I would at least have a line on my resume about it so there isn't a two year gap.cavalier1138 wrote:I don't see why you'd report this to employers...
But schools might be a little concerned about you dropping out of a grad program.
I don't know if the issue here would be dropping out quite as much as spending so much time on it to begin with. Liberal arts PhDs are sort of a kiss of death for non-academic jobs - you have to really work HARD to convince employers you actually want (and can) do something else. I think spending say a year in a MA program and deciding you wanted to do something else is much easier to spin than spending 5-7 years in a PhD program and then trying to make the same argument - I think the latter also looks much more like you washed out than the former.SmokeytheBear wrote:Depends on what kind of law school you're at.sluggla wrote:Is there any harm in not finishing a graduate degree when it comes to employment? I'm looking at big law specifically. Will employers even care?
I have two friends from my t-13 who had slightly above median grades, who had both gotten almost all the way through their PhD at a very good school in a liberal art, who both struck out at OCI, while others with similar grades etc had call backs up the wazoo. I'm guessing employers saw it as lack of dedication or just bouncing around and feared that they would jump ship or just do the summer for funsies.
I wasn't sure if it's at all misleading to leave that experience off a resume. I'm certainly fine not bringing it up and filling the gap with the work experience I had during the two years, but I wasn't sure whether it's frowned on to hide it.cavalier1138 wrote:
It was two years and I worked part time somewhere else the entire time. It is't so much that I washed out - rather, finishing the degree was going to cost 10-15k and not advance my legal career. I chose to not delay law school and take on extra debt for something that would essentially offer me no advantage in hiring. I assume that's a spin (in the event employers see it on my resume) that might be palatable. Please correct me if I'm wrong.A. Nony Mouse wrote: