Showing posts with label lawyers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lawyers. Show all posts

3/18/2013

Law School in a Box Review

Law School in a Box
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Boy, do I feel like a great big chump for spending six figures on law school tuition. Someone gave this to me as a graduation present, and it was a crushing blow to realize how much time and money I could have saved. Then again, none of my attorney colleagues have Cardozo and Jefferson trading cards. So who's the chump now?

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Who Needs the Ivy League? This handsome metal box features a complete legal education, courtesy of the distinguished faculty at Mental_Floss magazine. Contents include: • Our comprehensive textbook, Law School in 96 Pages • 10 Heroes of the Courtroom Trading Cards • 10 Extra Credit Flash Cards • Bar Exam Trivia Challenge • Rolled College Diploma with Real Latin Words

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3/05/2013

Running from the Law: Why Good Lawyers Are Getting Out of the Legal Profession Review

Running from the Law: Why Good Lawyers Are Getting Out of the Legal Profession
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Arron's thesis is simple: Law today is a beastly profession, and that is why some of the best and brightest are getting out. This is part self-help book, part career guide. A lot of the feelings these people experienced such as ridicule and incredulity from families and co-workers are explored in detail. Finally, each person who's profiled in the book talks about how and why they changed to their current job.
I found it extremely informative, and the appendices were filled with URLs of websites that talk about changing from a legal career to another field. I highly recommend it.

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2/08/2013

Later-in-Life Lawyers: Tips for the Non-Traditional Law Student Review

Later-in-Life Lawyers: Tips for the Non-Traditional Law Student
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Finally - a guide book about law school that doesn't claim to have all the answers. I've been accepted to law school and have spent money on many other law guides, such as Planet Law School, Law School Confidential, etc. Those are good books and very useful, but really only deliver just one person's perspective (although in the case of LSC, slightly more than one person's perspective) on the whole law school experience. This book draws on the experiences of many individuals and contains some very revealing insight as a result of its diverse content.
It's entitled Later in Life Lawyers, but the sections actually dealing with old(er) people issues are not really that dominant. If you're a career changer (like I was), this book will be perfect. If you're a traditional law student, then this book still has plenty of meat for you too.
I tried the web site, Nontradlaw.com, that this book is linked to. The site itself seems to be a decent resource - lots more of the same information. If you like the site, you'll like the book and vice versa. The site does have a little bit of a older person vibe to it (a little mature for my taste), but again, it's one of the better pre law web sites out there.
One thing I really liked was the fact that it didn't play to the US News rankings. For many - if not most - law applicants, the rankings are important, but often largely irrelevent. All 4 tiers of law school are full with students. It's not like sane, motivated people actually decide not to go to law school because they didn't get into a top tier law school like some other guide books recommend (and often all-but-require). If you're like most law applicants out there, this book doesn't insult you or make you feel like you're doomed to failure if you aren't in a position to go to Harvard for whatever reason. After reading some other pre law guides, I almost wanted to give up on the whole legal education thing because I felt like because I could only attend a lower tier school (for family reasons), I was doomed to a life of chasing ambulances. Common sense and a little research, of course, tells anyone with half a brain that attending a lower tier law school does not ruin your career or make you a bad lawyer - there's plenty of successful non top school lawyers out there, and plenty of crappy top law school lawyers, and most clients don't care where you went to law school as long as you graduated and passed the bar exam - and this is just about the only pre law book I've read that takes a straightforward, practical look at this issue. If you don't have a 170 LSAT and a GPA of 3.75 or more, then this book does deliver good, practical advice for you in navigating the application process and won't make you rather slit your wrists than attend a non top law school.
In sum, one of the better pre law guides on the market right now. Very down to earth and straightforward. A good addition to your pre law school reading list. The Nontradlaw franchise seems to be doing a good job, although I wouldn't recommend relying solely on it for all your information. I would put this book up in my trifecta of worthwhile pre law books, along with PLS and LSC.

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Law school is a scary place for any new student.For an older ("non-traditional") student, it can be intimidating as well as being ill-designed for the needs of an older, second-career student with children, mortgages, and the like.This book compiles advice from the author, lawyer-editors, and dozens of current and former law students, on such matters as dealing with families and children, the LSAT and GPAs for the older student, the law school application process and law school rankings for non-traditional students, paying for law school, surviving first year and non-academic hurdles, and the occasional skeleton in the non-traditional closet.

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12/18/2012

Beyond L.A. Law: Inspiring Stories of People Who've Done Fascinating Things with a Law Degree Review

Beyond L.A. Law: Inspiring Stories of People Who've Done Fascinating Things with a Law Degree
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This book is full of motivational, inspiring stories about people who have used their law degree both in traditional settings and to move beyond traditional settings. Easy reading. Each chapter is an individual story. I'd love to meet some of the folks included in this book!

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Beyond L.A. Law gives you a fascinating glimpse into the lives of people who've broken the lawyer mold.They come from a variety of backgrounds--some had prior careers, others went straight through college and law school, and yet others have overcome poverty and physical handicaps.

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11/02/2012

What Can You Do With a Law Degree?: A Lawyer's Guide to Career Alternatives Inside, Outside & Around the Law Review

What Can You Do With a Law Degree: A Lawyer's Guide to Career Alternatives Inside, Outside and Around the Law
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This book was almost completely worthless.
Basically, the author's suggestions are along the lines of "With a law degree, you can be a doctor!!! Of course, you will have to go to med school first..."; "with a law degree, you can be a chemist!!! But you may have to go back to school and pick up some of those science and math courses you skipped in undergrad because you knew you were going to law school..."
I mean, yes, I already KNEW I could go and be WHATEVER, given the proper additional training and/or sufficiently low expectations ("a drug dealer...WITH A LAW DEGREE!!!"). What this book's title suggests is an anlysis of alternative career paths utilizing a law degree, and what it delivers is a worthless list of random jobs that you are at least not banned from by virtue of having a law degree. I admire the author for tapping into what is an almost genetic yearning in the legal profession to GET OUT (and thereby getting out herself), but as a useful tool, the book fails miserably.

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Written by a lawyer for lawyers, Deborah Arron's book is a virtual encyclopedia for lawyers in transition, covering such topics as how to conduct a self-assessment and transferrable skills analysis, how to detect and prepare for layoff, how to establish a transitional financial plan, how to market your special talents, how to work with career consultants and headhunters, how to decide whether to stay in law or leave, how to avoid job-interview hell, how to handle compensation negotiations that work in your favor.

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