Law School Question
Posted: Fri Jan 22, 2016 8:20 pm
Hello,
A bit about me, I have middle of the road GPA and LSAT and I am currently active duty. I am currently intending to go to Law School in the Fall of 2016, as that is when I discharge from the military. I currently have acceptance to several Top 100 schools and I am trying to decide on which to go with, but I am becoming disheartened the more I read these forums in that it seems there is no point in attending a school if it is not T14 or you want to work in that state/region. Is this really that accurate? If so is it due to lack of other work experiences or do most law firms or hiring bodies not care about other work experience? If not, do other language fluencies help in the job hunting process? I am proficient in Mandarin and may pick another language up before I graduate, whether through classes or a MA in addition to my JD in East Asian Studies or language, and was curious if that was worth it? Would the dual degree be worth it? The majority of my tuition is covered by the Post 9/11 and Yellow Ribbon programs at the schools I have applied to so it would not be too hard for me to get a loan for another year or couple of semesters if I go over Summer. Further is it worth it to get a joint degree at all or would I be better in picking one up from an unrelated field than my language skillset?
Sorry for the rambling and length. Thank you for your answer
TL;DR - Not T14 that crippling for career? Mandarin Chinese offset lower ranked schools? Joint Degree in language, nother field or none at all?
A bit about me, I have middle of the road GPA and LSAT and I am currently active duty. I am currently intending to go to Law School in the Fall of 2016, as that is when I discharge from the military. I currently have acceptance to several Top 100 schools and I am trying to decide on which to go with, but I am becoming disheartened the more I read these forums in that it seems there is no point in attending a school if it is not T14 or you want to work in that state/region. Is this really that accurate? If so is it due to lack of other work experiences or do most law firms or hiring bodies not care about other work experience? If not, do other language fluencies help in the job hunting process? I am proficient in Mandarin and may pick another language up before I graduate, whether through classes or a MA in addition to my JD in East Asian Studies or language, and was curious if that was worth it? Would the dual degree be worth it? The majority of my tuition is covered by the Post 9/11 and Yellow Ribbon programs at the schools I have applied to so it would not be too hard for me to get a loan for another year or couple of semesters if I go over Summer. Further is it worth it to get a joint degree at all or would I be better in picking one up from an unrelated field than my language skillset?
Sorry for the rambling and length. Thank you for your answer
TL;DR - Not T14 that crippling for career? Mandarin Chinese offset lower ranked schools? Joint Degree in language, nother field or none at all?