This isn't like paying for an education, it's like buying a starter set from Amway, hoping to get rich.
Think about it. This is exactly the pitch you get from Amway: "Some people can have incredible success. These are the people who are willing to work hard, to sacrifice, to make this their number one priority." But if you live in an area that's already oversaturated with Amway, or you're not a person who can make cold calls, then you're not goign to make a million dollars in Amway no matter how dedicated you are. Actually, only about 12 people are going to make any money in Amway, and the rest of them are paying for the products and only in the system to keep those 12 people rich.
Law school is kind of like that (at least my law school). They don't pretend they're teaching you the law - you're expected to learn that in your first job. You're just here to make good grades so you can get a good first job. The ones who don't, don't get a job, so don't get to learn. So I'm paying to be here, but they don't have to teach me anything. I'm just paying for the opportunity to figure out if I can do this. So basically my tuition provides a system that will make 12 people in my class rich in good jobs. Why is this ok? And six-figure debt is a really expensive starter set. I think Amway is only a couple hundred.
Thanks for letting me get this off my chest. I'm feeling pretty stupid right now. Six figure debt to join Amway. And my clinic prof actually said he shouldn't have to teach me. Yep. I need to figure this out somehow and I'm just clueless. Work is easy, but there's no negotiating power here for students at all. You just take what you get, and pay for the privelige. This is crazy! Oh well.
Anyone who got on well with professors or who liked school have any tips? I do not get this system at all... It's like it only matters who you are, not what you do...
Thanks for letting me vent y'all. I'm so stressed I can barely leave the house right now.
Oh, and my school is ranked number 37, so it's not great, but it's not like it's a third tier. And I had a 166 lsat, so it's not like I'm not able to learn. And I worked so hard that seriously, I dont' look nearly as good as I did before. So it's not like I'm lazy. It's a combination of me being dumb and the teachers not answering my questions because they don't like who I am or something. What a waste of money. But at least I'll have the degree and some great stories.
I got along reasonably well with my professors (though there were plenty I couldn't stand), but I did not like law school, for the reasons you just mentioned. I'm guessing you got some grades back from this semester and are bummed about them. Here is my two cents:
1) The academic rat-race that all professors are subjected to is not designed around students and their needs. Your clinic prof probably "doesn't feel like he should have to teach you" because he's working on a seminar presentation or a law review article or some other crap that will look good on his resume but has nothing to do with making sure you get a good value out of your education. He has no incentive to make sure that you are learning. For many professors, students are not their first priority, because once you have tenure, the administration can't make you care anymore. Other professors choose to make teaching important; do whatever you can to seek them out and take their classes, even if they concentrate in subjects you're not terribly interested in. Professors can make or break your law school experience, because apathy in the classroom is contagious.
2) They lie, lie, lie like dogs to you about your grades and who's getting a job and where and why. These are professors giving you career advice, and most of them did not work very long in private practice (if at all) before they started teaching. Plus, they aren't out there in the real world working now, so it's unlikely they are superduper experts on the current employment market. Even if you have average grades, you will get a job. Your law school is ranked 37? That is awesome. You will get a job with a degree from there, espeically once you pass a state bar... never you mind about that.
For the record, I just graduated from a third tier law school and put forth a lot of effort academically. Sometimes it paid off, sometimes it didn't, but I did more than just study. I invested time in other activities that were school/career related where my success was directly proportional to the time I spent and had nothing to do with arbitrary grades. Employers care about those things, too.
Don't forget, Dizzy, that there are lots of ways to measure success... it's not always about the job you get and whether you "get rich." It's about joy and peace and feeling satisfied with the work you do every day. A J.D. will help you find your path and open doors for you, but personal fulfillment is about doing what you like to do. It will all work out, don't you worry. There will be some more sucky moments ahead, but it doesn't last forever.
ETA: I just wanted to mention one more thing.... a J.D. is a very flexible degree that offers hundreds of career choices--traditional and non-traditional. Grades, law review, etc. are important if you want a job with BIG FIRM, but if you don't care about that, you really shouldn't sweat them as much. Concentrate in taking the classes in the subject areas you want and cultivating interest and experience in whatever field you're attracted to. (For instance, if you're really into immigration, try working part-time for an immigration firm or do some volunteer work at a Literacy Center tutoring non-citizens in English. Activities that demonstrate your commitment to doing a certain type of work will stand out to future employers more than your Civil Procedure grades.)
sorry, but your post had me cracking up! ((((hugs))) though. I feel the same wa about grad school, so I totally understand how you feel. At least my degree was cheaper.
And hopefully the money wasn't the only reason you went to law school, right? There's gotta be something about it that you love or else I doubt you'd have made it as far as you did and done as well as you have...so I'm sure you'll be fine and happy once you graduate and can actually work.
haha - actually, I hadn't gotten my grades yet. The above cynicism (not that I'm the only one, check out the website "one hell" if you're going to law school after working for a few years) was prompted by the following:
- The graduating class speaker, elected by the student body, so obviously well-liked and respected, doesn't yet have a job. Clearly he did many things right, and now he has no way to pay back his loans. He'll have to starve all summer, take the bar, and then try to figure out how to get someone to hire him. He obviously is not a screw up (I know him) and the school has done nothing for him.
- I was talking to two top-whatever-percent students about how they got their jobs. A career service employee just called someone, then set up the interview, the students showed up , and that was it. But when I or my other low-percent friends go to career services, we are consistently told that they can give us a list of alumni and the firms where they work so we can call them ourselves (The list is alphabetical, with no information about specialties, and the one I had was completely out of date). So it seems like the school resources go to the top people, who are more likely to get a high paying job which will improve the school's ranking, and there's a subtle, "well, good luck with that" for the rest.
- I heard yet ANOTHER law-prof-makes-blatant-ethnic-slur-to-stunned-class story. No one ever says anything because they are a law prof and for some reason cannot be questioned. This one was based on the all-asians-look-alike-and-know-eachother (and inclued a little "you people" DANCE for crissakes). On the more "tolerant" end of things, another prof offered extra credit to anyone who could find a gay student a boyfriend. Y'all, I wish I was making this crap up.
- My clinic experience was horrible. I took the clinic because I wanted to do something, and instead spent all semester kissing up to a guy who expected me to flunk out of all my other classes in order to sit at his feet endlessly like he's JESUS or something. And when I complained that his searches were unfocused and he wasn't available for questions, he said he wasn't there to answer basic questions. (subtext, I'm too dumb to be helped) What the hell is he there for, then? And then I realized, he was there because he's important and it was my job to get face time with him so he'll tell other people that I am like him and could be important someday and that was all we were doing. And I PAID for it. It wasn't a bad job where I was stuck but could maneuver out, I paid for the privelege of learning nothing while stroking an already overfed ego. And that theory-loving, bill-padding, foot-draggin asshat would have been fired from my newspaper. Fired.
- For the third time, one of my friends told me they were hired by a place that had told me they were not hiring. Something about me seems to put off all lawyers. And it's freaking me out because I'm supposed to fit in with this bunch - law is all about convincing other lawyers you're just like them. There's no objective criteria at all in law school (maybe once you get a job - I wouldn't know) And then I realized that I don't like many of the lawyers either. They seem status obsessed, unable to converse and prone to really horrible jokes that I cannot force myself to laugh at. Also, their body language frequently says "My childhood was spent locked in a closet with nothing to amuse me but the cockroaches." Glazed eyes, rigid backs, jerky "I'll say what you want me to say" gestures.
- Then I thought about the people I do like here (there are many of them too, it's not all bad). And I realized they are almost all unemployed or deemed unemployable by career services. And the few that will be able to pay back their student loans, I tend to like in a "wow, isn't she sweet, we have to keep the smart person around the group because she's such a hoot" type of way. Not a "wow we have so much in common" way.
- Then I decided I needed a drink, and realized that in two years, I've gone from "two martinis and I hit the floor" to "two mixed drinks and four beers is a night when I'm not drinking, (not really anyway)."
- Then some prospective law student said something about how all the good people will get teh good jobs, with a subtext that assumed she would be one of those people, and my immediate reaction was "NOT." The people who are most like the other people will get the jobs. And I realized that future law student is betting that she will be good, when she should be betting that she will be like other people. People that I don't particularly like. Further, she is passing judgment on the people who don't get the grades. Which reminded me of an Amway salesman pitch I heard once.
Hi Dizzy-- your post definitely struck a chord with me. I just graduated law school and have felt a little bit bitter about the whole experience. Law school is tough and can definitely take it's toll. Here are some of my thoughts.
1. Professors are going to be a mixed-bag wherever you go, no matter what kind of program you're in. Law school professors can sometimes be an arrogant lot, but think of it this way: you're not there to become best friends with your law school professor. You're just there to get a good grade. So I would generally ignore career advice from professors (unless you're looking for a clerkship or want to go into academia) and just focus on getting the grades you need. That being said, you should not have to stand for ethnic slurs being made in class so I would take that up with the administration of your law school.
2. The job situation can definitely be tough. I just graduated from a top 25 law school with a great career services office that did *everything* in their power to help us get jobs and I still have friends who graduated unemployed. I know it's frustrating when it seems like all of these sources that are supposed to be helping you get a job are working against you. But that is the truth of the job market right now, particularly in the legal profession. Networking plays a huge role as does luck. The only thing you can do is get your resume out to as many ppl as humanly possible. Send your resume to EVERY lawyer you know and follow-up. Don't let any leads go unfollowed. I got my post-graduation job very randomly: I was working on the tenth floor of a major building in Chicago and on a whim, sent my resume to a hiring partner on the eighth floor. She invited me to come down and meet with her and after a formal interview, she created a position for me even though they currently had no openings for graduating 3Ls. So, positions exist even where places tell you they aren't hiring. You just have to get out there and make yourself known. I know it sucks to have to do this much leg-work when you're paying this much for law school. But at the end of the day, it's your career and it's up to you to steer it in the direction you want.
3. Law school is what you make of it. It sounds like you haven't had the best experiences at your law school and my heart goes out to you bc law school is such an exhausting experience. It really does drive ppl to drink! But my best advice to you would be to try and explore particular areas of law that interest you through your classes and try to focus your summer job efforts on those areas. I hated law school but the one thing that kept me going was my focus on civil rights law. I loved that particular area of law so I tried to take related classes during law school and jobs during the summer. That kept my morale high and my goals reachable. And it enabled me to get a great civil rights job after graduation because I already had so much experience in the subject area.
Keep your chin up. Law school is hell for everyone but it will be over before you know it-- I can hardly believe I'm done. And a law degree really is so versatile-- if you decide you don't want to be a lawyer in the end, there are a million things you can do with your degree.
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"He does dress better than I do...what would I bring to the relationship?" ~ Clueless
Poor Dizzy. I graduated from law school two years ago. I'm so sorry you are disillusioned right now. A lot of my friends and I all went through the "why am I wasting my money on school that I can't stand" dilemma during our time there.
I am so sorry that your professor made such an offensive comment. That is completely against the spirit of a legal education, as well as the principles we as lawyers pledge to uphold. Have you considered talking to the dean of students about this?
In terms of job advice - I went to a school where we had on campus interviews for 2Ls- which doesn't work out for everyone, since it is mostly big firms who can take the time to participate. However, there are TONS of jobs out there. I went the big firm route and used the on campus interview route. One of my best friends had to sort of make her own way, but she ended up at a very prestigious smaller firm and loves it. Pretty much everyone I know went through the rollercoaster of rejection, depression, frustration, etc. that's the job search, but we all emerged employed.
Law school does seem to attract a larger than normal amount of obnoxious people. On the other hand, it attacts a ton of really devoted people who really care about society and believe in the power of law to make things better. I hope you find some more of the latter, because law school can be great.