Can you find a prejudice against people who attend law school later in life?
Simply put, I do not. In fact, I feel the opposite is often true, both but, more importantly, once law school is over and graduates are looking for employment. Students and graduates seeking a career in law enforcement after being in the work sector for an elongated period have certain advantages over their fellow pupils who went directly from high school to college after law school: real-world experience and "know-how."
Was there anything that you wished you would have done otherwise in law school that you did not understand before you began to practice?
I am glad I did not purchase commercial outlines prior to after the first semester. I am glad I fought to figure out the procedural history and facts also had to identify the issues. Yes, I probably could have had more sleep and not as silent crying in my cubicle at work, but training my brain to figure out out those things has been a advantage in the future. I had been fulfilled my skills were fine following my ranges came in, and that I purchased some commercial outlines to assist me. There aren't any commercial outlines, while I read instances now, and I do just fine with them.
what's the most effective way to get a job?
Even though it isn't quite as simple as it had been five or six years back before the economic downturn, finding a job in the legal marketplace has improved considerably in the previous two decades.
Did any classes prove particularly useful as you started practicing?
To tell the truth, none of my substantive law classes were very beneficial in practice beyond supplying a general understanding of how to read and examine a situation and an overall understanding of legal principles. Probably the most useful skills classes are those taught by adjunct professors about cutting topics such as e-discovery, social media and the law, employment law trends, and the like, in which you know about timely issues and, presumably, would retain the knowledge for use when you graduate.
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