Become American Lawyer Without JD or LSAT!!!
Posted: Mon Jul 04, 2011 9:15 am
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=5&t=159634
I think that's an excessively large risk to take. As a practical financial matter, you can't take out federal loans to attend schools outside the US. Plus it's not like you can just waltz into any of the foreign law schools. Also, do you have any definitive info on which (if any) state bars admit foreign LLMs? Law school isn't like med school, with a system in place for foreign schools to take on American students who couldn't get into any US school and for foreign doctors to get easily licensed in their state.hirschas wrote:Well, I want to hear everyone's thoughts on American high school graduates leaving US shores to enroll in LLB programs at foreign universities (common or civil law jurisdictions) and then coming back to the US, doing an LLM (WITHOUT HAVING TO TAKING THE F%*CKING LSAT), taking the BAR, and becoming US lawyers, all within 5 sweet and time productive years. I want to hear your opinions and knowledge on the whole notion, from quality of education to job placement to American high school graduates having the huevos to go abroad to the technicalities of the process. I ask because (1) it is a topic worth discussion and (2) I want to be able to provide good advice to the younger generation. Maybe if we get enough aspiring US lawyers abandoning the JD, US universities will be forced to reintroduce the LLB and future lawyers can be saved three years of suffering, loans, the LSAT etc.
[Please, no childish name calling or slandering crap, just intelligent discussion for this thread]
This. There is no way the OP was written by someone who pwned the LSATs.rinkrat19 wrote:Sounds like someone sucks at the LSAT.
Or by someone who is a native speaker of english.kwais wrote:This. There is no way the OP was written by someone who pwned the LSATs.rinkrat19 wrote:Sounds like someone sucks at the LSAT.
You are correct on all but one point... you can take out federal loans to go outside of the US. All kinds of schools all over the world are recognized by the US Dept of Ed.schooner wrote:
I think that's an excessively large risk to take. As a practical financial matter, you can't take out federal loans to attend schools outside the US. Plus it's not like you can just waltz into any of the foreign law schools. Also, do you have any definitive info on which (if any) state bars admit foreign LLMs? Law school isn't like med school, with a system in place for foreign schools to take on American students who couldn't get into any US school and for foreign doctors to get easily licensed in their state.
lolhirschas wrote:[Please, no childish name calling or slandering crap, just intelligent discussion for this thread]
What do you know, you are right. I had always heard "school must be accredited in the U.S." for financial aid and only just checked.firemed wrote:You are correct on all but one point... you can take out federal loans to go outside of the US. All kinds of schools all over the world are recognized by the US Dept of Ed.schooner wrote:
I think that's an excessively large risk to take. As a practical financial matter, you can't take out federal loans to attend schools outside the US. Plus it's not like you can just waltz into any of the foreign law schools. Also, do you have any definitive info on which (if any) state bars admit foreign LLMs? Law school isn't like med school, with a system in place for foreign schools to take on American students who couldn't get into any US school and for foreign doctors to get easily licensed in their state.
I just looked up a school that said you have to complete a couple APs to be eligible.schooner wrote:
What do you know, you are right. I had always heard "school must be accredited in the U.S." for financial aid and only just checked.
By the way, what reputable schools of law in Singapore and England will accept American kids with only a high school diploma? I think that's the first real hurdle here, if you're going to seriously entertain his proposal.
Me too: King's College in London. http://www.kcl.ac.uk/prospectus/undergr ... quirementssarahlawg wrote:I just looked up a school that said you have to complete a couple APs to be eligible.schooner wrote:
What do you know, you are right. I had always heard "school must be accredited in the U.S." for financial aid and only just checked.
By the way, what reputable schools of law in Singapore and England will accept American kids with only a high school diploma? I think that's the first real hurdle here, if you're going to seriously entertain his proposal.
Amen. I am an American with an LLB and nobody would give me the time of day until they heard about my acceptance to a JD program. A girl who graduated with me and who went on to get an LLM (also American and took the bar) is now working one non-legal job and a bunch of volunteer jobs (also non-law).mabad wrote:Hmm..i'm going to weight in with what i know.. I have a LL.B from a civil law jurisdiction and from what i've heard from people from my school (best law school here) who have done the LL.B+LL.M (top-20 schools) only about 5-10% land an associate job in the US (and mainly because they got help from somebody they knew or from the law firms they worked at before the LL.M --> this means all of them had legal work experience prior to the LL.M). Having that said, I know this may not work the same for U.S. natives but overall it does help for pinpointing that US law firms do not think highly of the LL.M when it comes to hiring. I mean, people are having a hard time landing a job even with a J.D., and with the surplus of graduating lawyers pretty much in every state, I just wouldn't take the chance of not landing my dream job.
In my very own case, i'm starting 1L this year. In this competitive market a LL.M is not enough anymore, not even in civil law jurisdictions.
lol.hirschas wrote:doing an LLM (WITHOUT HAVING TO TAKING THE F%*CKING LSAT)
rinkrat19 wrote:Sounds like someone sucks at the LSAT.