It is always interesting to me how at the beginning of the semester there are so few people in the library. I tend to study there, myself, as I like how quiet it is in the morning and I, for some reason, can not study at home. Maybe it's the distractions. Either way, I was in the library briefing some cases and could not help but notice there was someone next to me studying. Being curious by nature, I decided to see what class she was studying. It was contracts. I noticed she had all her markers out, sticky notes of various colors, and a bevy of pens. I smiled, thinking to myself about those 1L days, when everyone used to think of law school as a type of kindergarten.
Then, on the way to tinkle, I noticed another person with loads and loads of notecards, and she was writing like a fiend. Again, a 1L class, Torts. I smiled, thinking "these 1L's are adorable". I rarely, in the upper classes, see anyone doing this type of thing. Everyone is a bit more lethargic and scared in the higher up classes, except for the few that probably make themselves feel better by going to top-law-schools and posting about how they are going to find a job, but nobody else will.
I kind of miss the days when I highlighted in my Property book in 4 colors. Blue for rules, pink for profound sayings, yellow for important parts, pen underlines for important facts, and green for policy. Now I just scribble and read through furiously, wondering if this stuff will even be asked about on the test, or hoping that I don't get called on for the next class.
I will say, law school was a lot more fun before my highlighters all went dry and my books looked like the rainbow. In fact, I wonder what the people who bought them off half.com thought when they received my old books. If it was me, I would have been depressed, thinking to myself, awww I wanted to color in it. In fact, it probably feels like you purchased a used coloring book. Maybe not as many people are like this, but I was, and a ton of 1Ls seem to be. Maybe it's a type of syndrome. A side effect of the law school education.
Law has always been one of the sought-after and widely respected degrees to study at university. Our guide has everything you need to know to get started.
Friday, 3 February 2012
Law School Class Rank | Transferring Law Schools
I recently received the following e-mail:
PLEASE DO NOT RESPOND TO THIS EMAILDear Upper Class Students,Class ranks are recalculated at the end of each fall and spring semester. This cannot be done until all grades have been submitted by the faculty. At present, three class rosters of grades have not yet been submitted by faculty to the Registrar. This has been reported to the Associated Dean for Academic Affairs and the faculty, according to faculty rules, are being fined $100 days per day per roster. When the grades are submitted, I will re-calculate class ranks and send an email notifying you that you can find your new rank under Grade Point Average by Term in Web Advisor. A class rank letter will also be mailed to you.
I could not help but grin at the thought of a law professor, who probably makes well over $120,000 a year being fined the massive sum of $100 per day! Can you imagine? Now, keep in mind that this letter was sent on January 14th. As of today, February 3rd, there is still no class rank posted.
What kind of motivation is needed then? I do not think that the sum of $100 a day is going to do much, especially if he/she values being able to take the grading process very slowly and instead do whatever it is that law professors do. It may be worth $100 a day to sit back and focus on other tasks, such as playing Virtual Boy, or whatever it may be.
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Virtual Boy -- the greatest gaming system of all time! |
In fact, this is not the first time something similar has happened to me. During my 2nd semester, one of my professors was late in turning in exams. Professors are often given a month's time to grade exams, and to be late on this, when people use their grades for jobs, transferring, and other professional tasks, seems irresponsible. Professors get angry when their students do not know every little tidbit of the case, yet it's alright for them to be chronically late with exam grading? We are not the ones being paid thousands upon thousands of dollars to teach a couple of classes using the same recycled notes from years past.
Perhaps there are better ways to motivate a professor. A wage reduction for chronic lateness in grading papers? Being disbarred perhaps? Maybe a caning like in Singapore? Something along those lines would be more in line with the real motivation that is needed. I say we take 'em all out back and flog 'em even if one is a second late! That would make for a more interesting law school experience, and a better one for the students, I imagine. A floggin' instead of playin' the ol' Virtual Boy. It sounds like a plan!
The Importance of the Law School Class Rank
Why is the law school class rank so important? Well, if you are lucky enough to do well it is said you have a better chance of getting a coveted "big law" job. Further, if you are in a lower tier school, such as a third tier school, you can often transfer to a better school. That being said, transferring law schools comes with its price. You lose your scholarships. You must weigh the costs and benefits of changing law schools. Is it worth having the name of your school on your JD and looking for a job under that school's pedigree, or would you rather have a more refined name on your diploma? For some, having a better school named on that piece of paper is very important. Others care mostly about the debt they will carry. Ultimately the choice is yours.
I would like to say that oftentimes the transfer doesn't really have a much better chance of getting a big law job. For example, take a student who transferred from Golden Gate University in San Francisco to Seattle University in Seattle, WA. Golden Gate University is a very low ranked school (fourth tier I believe). Seattle University is a second tier school and is said to be regional in its reach. If you are planning on practicing law in San Francisco or even California, you may want to stick with a school like Golden Gate University School of Law.
However, if you are hellbent on practicing law in Seattle and you abhor the idea of having a fourth tier school being your alma matter, then you may want to transfer. Again, you will probably (read 99% chance -- maybe more) lose your scholarships. Further, if you did well at the lower ranked school, you may want to stay.
You will want to weigh where you want to practice in your analysis. In the above example, if you want to practice law in Seattle, you may want to make the transfer. A Golden Gate University Graduate may not have a good chance of practicing law in Seattle. Seattle is a very hard market to practice in I have been told, and students from schools in Washington such as Seattle University and Gonzaga University are having a hard time competing with students from University of Washington School of Law.
That being said, if you are going to Golden Gate University, you are competing against UC Hastings, University of San Francisco (now in the third tier), and Stanford. Oh, did I forget UC Berkeley? You're also competing with UCLA and some of Southern California's great schools. Oh, and throw in Harvard and Yale, and even Columbia and the other big boys. So, you are realizing that maybe this whole law school thing wasn't worth it. I know I sometimes do. So, do you want to transfer or do you want to cut your losses?
In the end, I find that the whole law school thing is mind bogging and just plain upsetting. Do you want to play a game in which you constantly trying to climb to the top. If you are going to a low ranked school, you have to realize you are at the bottom of the pack, and to climb up from the fourth tier to the tip top and be lucky enough to get a job is not a small feat. In fact, it's next to impossible. And if you have the drive to do that, why did you not get into the top schools in the first place?
Of course, I don't want to depress you, but it is something to think about. If you are still a 1L and are thinking of transferring, ask yourself if there is anything you would rather do, and if that something is something you can do now, why not put the law school thing aside for a while? It will always be there when you feel the need to come back. However, the reality is, there may not be a want to come back once you find that you are truly passionate about something else. Further, law school is not Perry Mason or Judge Joe Mathis. In fact, Law School is a headache.
Either way, think about it long and carefully. And let me know what you think in the comments below.
Why is the law school class rank so important? Well, if you are lucky enough to do well it is said you have a better chance of getting a coveted "big law" job. Further, if you are in a lower tier school, such as a third tier school, you can often transfer to a better school. That being said, transferring law schools comes with its price. You lose your scholarships. You must weigh the costs and benefits of changing law schools. Is it worth having the name of your school on your JD and looking for a job under that school's pedigree, or would you rather have a more refined name on your diploma? For some, having a better school named on that piece of paper is very important. Others care mostly about the debt they will carry. Ultimately the choice is yours.
I would like to say that oftentimes the transfer doesn't really have a much better chance of getting a big law job. For example, take a student who transferred from Golden Gate University in San Francisco to Seattle University in Seattle, WA. Golden Gate University is a very low ranked school (fourth tier I believe). Seattle University is a second tier school and is said to be regional in its reach. If you are planning on practicing law in San Francisco or even California, you may want to stick with a school like Golden Gate University School of Law.
Golden Gate University, entrenched in the fourth tier |
You will want to weigh where you want to practice in your analysis. In the above example, if you want to practice law in Seattle, you may want to make the transfer. A Golden Gate University Graduate may not have a good chance of practicing law in Seattle. Seattle is a very hard market to practice in I have been told, and students from schools in Washington such as Seattle University and Gonzaga University are having a hard time competing with students from University of Washington School of Law.
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University of Washington School of Law |
In the end, I find that the whole law school thing is mind bogging and just plain upsetting. Do you want to play a game in which you constantly trying to climb to the top. If you are going to a low ranked school, you have to realize you are at the bottom of the pack, and to climb up from the fourth tier to the tip top and be lucky enough to get a job is not a small feat. In fact, it's next to impossible. And if you have the drive to do that, why did you not get into the top schools in the first place?
Of course, I don't want to depress you, but it is something to think about. If you are still a 1L and are thinking of transferring, ask yourself if there is anything you would rather do, and if that something is something you can do now, why not put the law school thing aside for a while? It will always be there when you feel the need to come back. However, the reality is, there may not be a want to come back once you find that you are truly passionate about something else. Further, law school is not Perry Mason or Judge Joe Mathis. In fact, Law School is a headache.
Either way, think about it long and carefully. And let me know what you think in the comments below.
Wednesday, 25 January 2012
New Semester... New Woes
So the new semester is in full force. I feel like a dog in the humane society waiting to be put to sleep. I keep telling myself: "soon I will be a rich lawyer like the person sitting next to me." Then I start to laugh and the professor asks me what I am laughing about, and then I mumble something to myself.
Seriously though, this semester is a lot like the last one. Two weeks in and I know who the gunners are and am already annoyed by their antics. Raising their hands to every question. I guess I should probably like them, they do take the heat off me. I have yet to be called on, which is great. Also, these classes are pretty relaxed. We are told in one class one class in advance if we will be called on or not. I have one class left this week and know I won't be called on. That's soothing at least.
Then there is the summer internship hunt. I am told that if we find something, we can maybe qualify for a stipend. That would be great huh? Just hoping it's not like the last one. I want to actually do some law related work. It's why I'm going in the first place, isn't it?
I was talking to someone the other day about school in general. She was telling me that she believes that college one day was more challenging. She could not say for sure, but based on what she has read, there was once a time where one spent great deals of time researching. She says she feels like college is dumbed down. I have to say I agree. I see the stuff undergraduate students are doing now and I shake my head. How did I not get straight A's on this stuff? Stuff like a 2 page report on a movie, or memorizing a few terms for a big exam. It only makes law school seem more brutal, but I think that's just the curve. It's not that law school is that hard, it's more of a psychological endurance than anything. Having to read 100 pages by itself is not challenging, but having to read it wondering if you will ever get a job in it or if you are wasting your time by reading it makes it seem a bit more of a chore. Add that to the sounds of women moaning in the library and it starts to get weird.
Seriously though, this semester is a lot like the last one. Two weeks in and I know who the gunners are and am already annoyed by their antics. Raising their hands to every question. I guess I should probably like them, they do take the heat off me. I have yet to be called on, which is great. Also, these classes are pretty relaxed. We are told in one class one class in advance if we will be called on or not. I have one class left this week and know I won't be called on. That's soothing at least.
Then there is the summer internship hunt. I am told that if we find something, we can maybe qualify for a stipend. That would be great huh? Just hoping it's not like the last one. I want to actually do some law related work. It's why I'm going in the first place, isn't it?
I was talking to someone the other day about school in general. She was telling me that she believes that college one day was more challenging. She could not say for sure, but based on what she has read, there was once a time where one spent great deals of time researching. She says she feels like college is dumbed down. I have to say I agree. I see the stuff undergraduate students are doing now and I shake my head. How did I not get straight A's on this stuff? Stuff like a 2 page report on a movie, or memorizing a few terms for a big exam. It only makes law school seem more brutal, but I think that's just the curve. It's not that law school is that hard, it's more of a psychological endurance than anything. Having to read 100 pages by itself is not challenging, but having to read it wondering if you will ever get a job in it or if you are wasting your time by reading it makes it seem a bit more of a chore. Add that to the sounds of women moaning in the library and it starts to get weird.
Friday, 20 January 2012
The Most Elitist Place on the Internet: Top-Law-Schools.com
When I was a tad bit younger, buckling up and getting ready to go to law school, I, like many 0L's happened upon top-law-schools.com. For the few not in the know, it is a forum for people to talk about everything that pertains to the wonderful and amazing world of law school. Here kids discuss and rank their schools, talk about their hopes and fears, and discuss job hunting strategies.
However, something more sinister is taking place. These kids are starting to believe that they are better than others. They are seeing that their school is ranked a bit higher, that their grades and rank are better, and that they have better job prospects. Some of these people are going to schools like Harvard and Columbia Law School. Others are "blessed" with schools such as Golden Gate University School of Law and Cooley. They start to size each other up, and as they do so, they become more and more elitist.
Now, I honestly believe that many who are thinking of going into law are elitist to an extent. The profession is a breeding ground for elitism. In law school each student is ranked according to how 'intelligent' they are, i.e. their grades. However, even though it could easily be argued that law school grades are arbitrary and even sometimes random with a lot of human error able to be present, law school students who are in the top 30% of their class feel smug. If you are in the top 10% with a summer internship lined up, you are the big cheese. And if you are that person but going to a top 14 school, you are THE CHEEZE. Three reasons that TLS sticks out to me:
1. Many TLS forumers are actually very sheltered kids who have little clue about reality.
One thing that strikes me about TLS as I will call it, is that if you post something on that site that does not jive with the cushy life experiences of the 'lawyer's son/daughter' they will cry 'flame'. I have seen this multiple times on the site, where someone asks advice about transferring to a lower ranked school for family reasons, or that they were in the top 20% but were having trouble finding legal employment. Some mention having life hardships that made it so that they could not find a job and are considering dropping out even though they have a high GPA. It is hard to realize that there are certain life experiences that interfere with school if you have never left your parents grasp.
2. TLS forumers think that they need a new Macbook every year for surfing the internet in class.
I made the mistake last semester of sitting in the back row. I thought law school was about studying, however I was made aware that it is really about google chat and facebook during class. It was so cute seeing all the students with their little MacBook Airs and iPads, surfing the internet, buying curtains and clothing, playing car racing games, and selling tickets. And then, when I went to TLS, I was made aware that every year one should purchase a new computer, because a three year old system is not good enough to take a law school exam on with exam4 or write a law school paper with.
3. TLS forumers think that everyone else is not going to get a job, but they will do something different and BAM! $160k/yearola.
I hate to burst their bubble, but even if they get a job that is good enough for them to sell the rest of their life into bondage for, they are not going to be happy. Someone else (their boss) will act just as elitist towards them as they act towards others.
In the end, I find TLS to be the most elitist place on the internet that I have come across. If you are serious about law school, you may want to check out this place. You should know who some of your classmates will be and who you will be working with and for if you are lucky enough.
However, something more sinister is taking place. These kids are starting to believe that they are better than others. They are seeing that their school is ranked a bit higher, that their grades and rank are better, and that they have better job prospects. Some of these people are going to schools like Harvard and Columbia Law School. Others are "blessed" with schools such as Golden Gate University School of Law and Cooley. They start to size each other up, and as they do so, they become more and more elitist.
Now, I honestly believe that many who are thinking of going into law are elitist to an extent. The profession is a breeding ground for elitism. In law school each student is ranked according to how 'intelligent' they are, i.e. their grades. However, even though it could easily be argued that law school grades are arbitrary and even sometimes random with a lot of human error able to be present, law school students who are in the top 30% of their class feel smug. If you are in the top 10% with a summer internship lined up, you are the big cheese. And if you are that person but going to a top 14 school, you are THE CHEEZE. Three reasons that TLS sticks out to me:
1. Many TLS forumers are actually very sheltered kids who have little clue about reality.
One thing that strikes me about TLS as I will call it, is that if you post something on that site that does not jive with the cushy life experiences of the 'lawyer's son/daughter' they will cry 'flame'. I have seen this multiple times on the site, where someone asks advice about transferring to a lower ranked school for family reasons, or that they were in the top 20% but were having trouble finding legal employment. Some mention having life hardships that made it so that they could not find a job and are considering dropping out even though they have a high GPA. It is hard to realize that there are certain life experiences that interfere with school if you have never left your parents grasp.
2. TLS forumers think that they need a new Macbook every year for surfing the internet in class.
I made the mistake last semester of sitting in the back row. I thought law school was about studying, however I was made aware that it is really about google chat and facebook during class. It was so cute seeing all the students with their little MacBook Airs and iPads, surfing the internet, buying curtains and clothing, playing car racing games, and selling tickets. And then, when I went to TLS, I was made aware that every year one should purchase a new computer, because a three year old system is not good enough to take a law school exam on with exam4 or write a law school paper with.
3. TLS forumers think that everyone else is not going to get a job, but they will do something different and BAM! $160k/yearola.
I hate to burst their bubble, but even if they get a job that is good enough for them to sell the rest of their life into bondage for, they are not going to be happy. Someone else (their boss) will act just as elitist towards them as they act towards others.
In the end, I find TLS to be the most elitist place on the internet that I have come across. If you are serious about law school, you may want to check out this place. You should know who some of your classmates will be and who you will be working with and for if you are lucky enough.
Friday, 13 January 2012
Wikitravel boasts Puerto Rico has 3 ABA law schools!
While looking at Wikitravel.org, a travel based site, I found myself intrigued when I read the following:
This was/is under the "Learn" section. I find it interesting that even on a travel page law school is mentioned. This is perhaps because of the popularity of law school in today's world. Are there other "World Traveling Law Students" out there?
I can't even begin to imagine going to law school in Puerto Rico. Sitting on the beach between classes, studying for the bar on Vieques or Culebra? Yes, I have been to Puerto Rico, and I must say it's a great place. I can just imagine driving along the Atlantic ocean during spring break with my law books in the back seat as I made my way to Sun Bay to camp and study. What a life, huh?
I can't help but wonder how the legal economy in Puerto Rico is like. It must be pretty decent for the island to have three law schools.
I am not aware that other US territories, such as Guam/Micronesia, have a law school. Maybe some of the students here make it over there. Those are two places that could perhaps use an ABA law school. Perhaps in the future I will make a post about places that should have another law school, or even a law school. For example, the massive state of Montana only has one law school, and it's in the western side of the state. That means if you live in Billings, the largest city in Montana, you have to move hundreds of miles away to go to law school.
With that being said though, Puerto Rico would have been a great place to go to law school. If only I knew Spanish...
"Most universities in Puerto Rico are accredited by US authorities and they offer quality educational programs. Its very easy to find Spanish courses as well as learn to dance salsa. Puerto Rico has 3 ABA-accredited law schools which are very competitive. The University of Puerto Rico Law School is very friendly towards international students and is a great option for foreigners looking for a quality, cheap education (subsidized by the government) that is less than 10 minutes from a beach!"(http://wikitravel.org/en/Puerto_Rico)
This was/is under the "Learn" section. I find it interesting that even on a travel page law school is mentioned. This is perhaps because of the popularity of law school in today's world. Are there other "World Traveling Law Students" out there?
I can't even begin to imagine going to law school in Puerto Rico. Sitting on the beach between classes, studying for the bar on Vieques or Culebra? Yes, I have been to Puerto Rico, and I must say it's a great place. I can just imagine driving along the Atlantic ocean during spring break with my law books in the back seat as I made my way to Sun Bay to camp and study. What a life, huh?
I can't help but wonder how the legal economy in Puerto Rico is like. It must be pretty decent for the island to have three law schools.
I am not aware that other US territories, such as Guam/Micronesia, have a law school. Maybe some of the students here make it over there. Those are two places that could perhaps use an ABA law school. Perhaps in the future I will make a post about places that should have another law school, or even a law school. For example, the massive state of Montana only has one law school, and it's in the western side of the state. That means if you live in Billings, the largest city in Montana, you have to move hundreds of miles away to go to law school.
With that being said though, Puerto Rico would have been a great place to go to law school. If only I knew Spanish...
Wednesday, 11 January 2012
My Internship From Hell!
I have recently read an interesting article on one of the blogs that I follow (see link: http://scholasticsnakeoil.blogspot.com/2012/01/indentured-internships.html ). On this blog, the author, who herself has been involved in the educational arena for quite some time, talks about internships:
I was told by my law school career counselor to pursue an internship EVERY semester. I thought this would sound advice. The more experience one has, the more likely you are to be hired. So, I immediately applied for everything but this guy, this fiend, he was the one to call me in first. He did not give me the address to the firm he worked at, so I googled him and found two addresses, both of which were near each other. So, I donned my suit and headed to meet him after class. Finally, I reached the office he worked in. A big-ass skyscraper building reaching towards the heavens. It looked legit. I walked in, where a big burly man grinned ear to tooth to me and had me sign in. No problem. I continued onward, marching towards the elevators where my interview would take place.
"I will not get the position. I will not get the position," I told myself, over and over. "I am wasting my time." A more attractive young man sat next to me, all dressed up in a suit that was nicer than mine. He would be interviewed after me. I knew he would get the job. He was prettier. Well, I must have been better 'slave material' because I was the one who was hired.
So, three days later, when I got the e-mail that I was chosen I was ecstatic. I went to my first day and was told that I had a number of tasks. NONE OF THESE TASKS WERE RELATED TO LAW.
1. "Water the plant once a week. Choose the day, but make sure that plant does not die. I will not water it, so it's up to you."
2. "Create a filing system and rearrange my files. There are some outside, as well."
3. "Take this trash (old computer and printer) down to the trash room and/or find out how to dispose of it."
4. "Make sure these walls are wiped down. You see these coffee stains? I want them gone."
5. Rearrange the last intern's office area to suit your needs. There is an ancient laptop there with Windows 2000 on it. That will be your workstation."
6. Go fax this form, make some copies.
7. Run to the post office, and send these letters!
8. Go to the UPS store. Now boy, run!
Basically this is the list I got. This was my first week. Later on I was told to brief a case of his and to call a client to make sure they were going to come in. Oh, and I interacted with a client by taking her $20 to her car due to some overpayment. That was interesting. As far as practical experience, I got none.
As far as theory was concerned, I can honestly say I was getting NEGATIVE theory. I was expected to skip class when he needed me. Even though I gave him my schedule, he had the gull to keep me from my class! I sent him an e-mail the next day, telling him I was done. He was flabbergasted, he could not figure out why I would leave such a great opportunity behind. I was really nice about it, saying "thank you" and "I value all the experience I got." However, the truth was, I got basically nil. When I was hired he told me how awful his last intern was and that he expected more of me. When his P-touch was out of ribbon he actually whined about it. He whined! I could not believe it, a grown man actually whining!!!!!
So that was my last internship. I am a bit scared to get another one, out of fear it ends up the same way. But, I realize I must if I am to succeed in this profession.
Now, this got me thinking about my last internship here at law school. It was for a solo practitioner with a firm dealing mostly with torts and landlord-tenant issues. He had me come to his firm, interviewed me, and out of many applicants, I am told, I was chosen to be his worker, I mean, slave. Now, I am used to working hard, as I have had my share of manual labor type jobs in the past. However, what I expected to get out of the internship, and what I got, well, those are two different things."Too often, the work they did in those internships bore little or no relationship to any work they would actually do in the careers or occupations for which they were preparing themselves--let alone to the theory they were learning in their classrooms."
I was told by my law school career counselor to pursue an internship EVERY semester. I thought this would sound advice. The more experience one has, the more likely you are to be hired. So, I immediately applied for everything but this guy, this fiend, he was the one to call me in first. He did not give me the address to the firm he worked at, so I googled him and found two addresses, both of which were near each other. So, I donned my suit and headed to meet him after class. Finally, I reached the office he worked in. A big-ass skyscraper building reaching towards the heavens. It looked legit. I walked in, where a big burly man grinned ear to tooth to me and had me sign in. No problem. I continued onward, marching towards the elevators where my interview would take place.
"I will not get the position. I will not get the position," I told myself, over and over. "I am wasting my time." A more attractive young man sat next to me, all dressed up in a suit that was nicer than mine. He would be interviewed after me. I knew he would get the job. He was prettier. Well, I must have been better 'slave material' because I was the one who was hired.
So, three days later, when I got the e-mail that I was chosen I was ecstatic. I went to my first day and was told that I had a number of tasks. NONE OF THESE TASKS WERE RELATED TO LAW.
"And, if the student isn't getting practical experience from the internship, what is the employer gaining? Free labor, of course."These tasks were:
1. "Water the plant once a week. Choose the day, but make sure that plant does not die. I will not water it, so it's up to you."
2. "Create a filing system and rearrange my files. There are some outside, as well."
3. "Take this trash (old computer and printer) down to the trash room and/or find out how to dispose of it."
4. "Make sure these walls are wiped down. You see these coffee stains? I want them gone."
5. Rearrange the last intern's office area to suit your needs. There is an ancient laptop there with Windows 2000 on it. That will be your workstation."
6. Go fax this form, make some copies.
7. Run to the post office, and send these letters!
8. Go to the UPS store. Now boy, run!
Basically this is the list I got. This was my first week. Later on I was told to brief a case of his and to call a client to make sure they were going to come in. Oh, and I interacted with a client by taking her $20 to her car due to some overpayment. That was interesting. As far as practical experience, I got none.
As far as theory was concerned, I can honestly say I was getting NEGATIVE theory. I was expected to skip class when he needed me. Even though I gave him my schedule, he had the gull to keep me from my class! I sent him an e-mail the next day, telling him I was done. He was flabbergasted, he could not figure out why I would leave such a great opportunity behind. I was really nice about it, saying "thank you" and "I value all the experience I got." However, the truth was, I got basically nil. When I was hired he told me how awful his last intern was and that he expected more of me. When his P-touch was out of ribbon he actually whined about it. He whined! I could not believe it, a grown man actually whining!!!!!
So that was my last internship. I am a bit scared to get another one, out of fear it ends up the same way. But, I realize I must if I am to succeed in this profession.
Sunday, 8 January 2012
Law School Starts Up Again Tomorrow!
Tomorrow is my first day of law school for 2012! I know it's hard to read sarcasm on the internet, but the truth is, I am not really excited. Actually, I am kind of nervous. Another semester of hoping I am not called on and wondering "will I find a job?"
I was out and about today and I thought to myself, back to last semester, at many in my class who thought they were pretty dang intelligent. Some would talk to the professor and say "the average person may not understand it, but we're law students, so we understand the real world better." I wanted to laugh, but instead I was watching the clock thinking, "let me the hell out of here."
You know, people in law school really think they are smart. Smarter than most. But I have to say, you are not that smart if you chose to go to law school. Every day I am reminded of this and think to myself, "what the hell am I doing?" I have some non-law related plans for after I graduate, just in case (as expected) I do not find a job in law. And even if I do find a law-related job, who says I will be able to stand it? Why did I not realize this sooner?
I also have not checked my grades from last semester. Well, I did a few days ago and they were up, so I told myself I will not check them until I graduate. I don't know why a law professor needs until after classes start to post grades. Classes start tomorrow (the 9th) and professors have until the 13th to get grades in. That is insane. This was not an issue in undergrad, nor I imagine it is an issue in many other graduate school courses. Law professors have it so easy compared to the pay they make, one would think they could turn in grades sooner. So my way of dealing with it is to not play their stupid little game. I will not check my grades until I graduate. Of course, I wonder if I even passed all my classes. My finals were a disaster. But who cares, right?
That's my rant. Again, tomorrow I start school, and I am going to enjoy every second of freedom I have left.
I was out and about today and I thought to myself, back to last semester, at many in my class who thought they were pretty dang intelligent. Some would talk to the professor and say "the average person may not understand it, but we're law students, so we understand the real world better." I wanted to laugh, but instead I was watching the clock thinking, "let me the hell out of here."
You know, people in law school really think they are smart. Smarter than most. But I have to say, you are not that smart if you chose to go to law school. Every day I am reminded of this and think to myself, "what the hell am I doing?" I have some non-law related plans for after I graduate, just in case (as expected) I do not find a job in law. And even if I do find a law-related job, who says I will be able to stand it? Why did I not realize this sooner?
I also have not checked my grades from last semester. Well, I did a few days ago and they were up, so I told myself I will not check them until I graduate. I don't know why a law professor needs until after classes start to post grades. Classes start tomorrow (the 9th) and professors have until the 13th to get grades in. That is insane. This was not an issue in undergrad, nor I imagine it is an issue in many other graduate school courses. Law professors have it so easy compared to the pay they make, one would think they could turn in grades sooner. So my way of dealing with it is to not play their stupid little game. I will not check my grades until I graduate. Of course, I wonder if I even passed all my classes. My finals were a disaster. But who cares, right?
That's my rant. Again, tomorrow I start school, and I am going to enjoy every second of freedom I have left.
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