http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html?scp=4&sq=law%20school&st=cseRead this. Makes me feel bad for all the people I know who are attending/applying law school.
1/19/2011 6:06:46 PM
Yeah, that's not a surprise. My girlfriend went to Seton Hall and punches me every time I say that I've repaid all my school loans. She's going to be paying her loans down for a long, long time.
1/19/2011 10:58:27 PM
yeah shitty law schools need to close, how do those people expect to find jobs when their are people with degrees from harvard?
1/20/2011 12:21:20 AM
It's "there," you troglodyte. Do you seriously turn your brain off when you post here? And why wouldn't people be able to find jobs simply because Harvard exists? It might also have to do with the fact that there are seven law schools just in North Carolina (UNC, Duke, NCCU, Campbell, UNC Asheville, and Elon).
1/20/2011 1:13:01 AM
no, you are the one who turns off your brain. i was obviously exaggerating to make a point, you Numbskull. what i'm saying is why bother going to law school at all if you can't even go to a respectable one? (harvard, duke, etc.) the schools that are on the top 20 lists, etc. I mean if someone goes to a shitty law school no one's even heard of, they deserve to not get a job, they should have known better than to even apply in the first place.
1/20/2011 9:47:49 AM
wake, not asheville, b
1/20/2011 10:29:55 AM
^that post needs some underlining so we can read the relevant bits
1/20/2011 10:30:07 AM
1/20/2011 11:15:13 AM
PLEASE LOG INhow about a tl;dr?
1/20/2011 12:19:00 PM
i go to law school. i'm not worried. hard work (and i don't mean graduating) still pays off. these articles are probably written about the people who would have a hard time finding a job out of undergraduate too. don't think a JD will magically open doors for you.
1/20/2011 3:02:44 PM
i wrote that before i read the article in question so id just like to point out a few quotes
1/20/2011 3:55:40 PM
^While this article does get into that^^, it seems more about the lower level law schools partaking in deceptive practices and having little reason stop without some sort of outside intervention. You basically have clueless people like that lined up but also along with all the other people that will eventually have mediocre grades, or even have high grades that aren't quite good enough for a lower tier school, that will struggle with the debt for years... even to the point of not being able to pay down the interest enough to keep it from growing... even if you have a decent job. I also find it pretty funny that the article is basically suggesting that the first part to becoming a lawyer involves getting screwed over/lied to by lawyers. FTA:
1/20/2011 4:15:41 PM
i'm going to walk into the dean's office tomorrow and ask him if he would like to be the first school to use more realistic results. will post results after.
1/20/2011 4:33:36 PM
those people should just declare bankruptcyi know it would be hard, but they just got out of law school, they should know the tricks to get it done
1/20/2011 10:23:53 PM
bankruptcy does exactly nothing for school loans, they are non-dischargeable
1/20/2011 10:47:38 PM
damn, that does suck then
1/21/2011 1:38:11 AM
they just released a figure that about 20% less people are signing up for the LSAT so i think instead of changing the way schools are run they'll just go along with articles like this scaring people away from applying. you can't have problems finding jobs if there isn't a flood of graduates.treats the symptoms but not the cause
1/22/2011 2:36:50 PM
1/23/2011 9:55:51 PM
Law school outlook comes in waves. There have been many times over the past 3 decades where there have been too many students, followed by not enough. Recession tends to drive more people into law school (particularly recent grads who might not have otherwise considered it).If you want to be a lawyer, go to law school and you'll do well. Ignore the stories about having too many law students, because the pendulum will swing before you get out in three years. If you are just aimless and have no idea what you want to do, so why not law school, you're in for some bitter disappointment. Lawyers work punishing hours and many never step foot in a court room their whole career. Only do something you love or you're going to fail and/or be miserable.Lastly, not all lawyers are created equal. If you have a niche, you'll be in great shape. Maybe you have an engineering or science background, which will open certain opportunities that the guy who majored in English Lit may not have.
1/26/2011 1:14:39 PM
2/4/2011 10:56:16 AM
^Make sense.Why pay back your loans for 10 years when you can file bankruptcy and its off your record in 10 years?
2/4/2011 3:21:34 PM
The "work hard and you'll make it" line only goes so far, really. The people graduating in the bottom half of their class, when their school isn't even top tier to begin with, are pretty much screwed.I think this speaks to a broader problem, though. Kids graduating from undergraduate that haven't actually worked and been independent usually have no problem taking on a huge amount of debt. The significance of their decision rarely becomes evident until sometime later.
2/4/2011 9:43:55 PM
2/6/2011 10:25:20 PM
2/8/2011 1:54:34 PM
It's essentially stating that people in the top half didn't have much of a shot to begin with since it was a mediocre school so if you're in the bottom half you're royally fucked.
2/8/2011 2:05:49 PM
Law of AveragesWhy the law-school bubble is bursting.http://www.slate.com/id/2288751/
3/21/2011 4:28:05 PM
I know some large companies are making significant cuts to their legal staff, especially those that are in the business of dictating internal policy. Thank God.It's about time companies realize that there's very little benefit in having revenue consuming parts of a company dictate arbitrary policies without regard to the needs of the revenue generating parts of a company.
3/22/2011 3:46:21 PM
Further proof of the scam in action:http://www.nytimes.com/2011/05/01/business/law-school-grants.html?src=me&ref=general
5/1/2011 7:51:08 PM