![]() |
|
| *Home>>>Intellectual Property |
If I cant get into a tier 1 or tier 2 law school, should I not bother? |
Hi, I'm 20 yo and I'm about to graduate a community college with a 3.4 cumulative GPA. I'm transferring to a university in the fall, majoring in political science and history. I hope to get a higher GPA there but I'm worried I wont be able to get into a tier 1 or tier 2 school with my GPA. I haven't begun studying for the LSAT yet, so I have no idea what I'm going to make on that, but if I dont have much of a shot at a tier 1 or tier 2 school should I find something else to do? A lot of people tell me I'd make a good attorney and I'm interested in intellectual property law & technology law, but if I can't get into a top school I worry I wont have many opportunities. What do you think? You will have a ton of opportunities with a law degree regardless of what type of school it comes from. Many of the big firms recruit from higher ranked schools but that does not mean you cannot work there if you do not go to a top school, it just may take more work on your behalf. Depends. If you will only be happy as an atty working for a very large law firm you need to go to a tier 1 or 2. If you would not mind working for a small or midsized law firm or the gov't it doesn't matter. Definately go to Law School. The Law School with the most number of Judges in Southern California is South Western Law School. You should still go. Don't worry about that yet. Your UGPA is fairly insignificant compared to your LSAT, so just take classes and study for the LSAT. I went to a tier 4 school, did well, and got a good job at a mid-sized regional firm. The previous poster is right, if you don't go to a tier 1 school, Jones Day or Holland Knight will likely not be breaking down your door. But there are many firms out there. Plus, if you don't get into your school of choice, you can always transfer after your first year. I applied for transfer after my first year and got into a tier 2 school but decided to stay at the school I was in. Finally, even if you don't get into Jones Day or the like out of law school, if you make a name for yourself as a good attorney and get some portable business, you can always end up there. Most attorney's did not go to tier 1 and tier 2 law schools. Just becaues you went to a good law school does not mean you will be a good attorney or make a lot of money. In fact, I've met some incompetant attorneys that have come from Ivy league schools, particularly Harvard Law. |
| Tags |
| Legal Malpractice Legal Ethics Landlord and Tenants Labor Law Juvenile Law Investment Law Intellectual Property Insurance Law Immigration Law Health Care Law General Civil Litigation Family Law |
| Related information |
Nope.....everything on the site is property of Y!A....which doesn't preclude someone from trying litigation, since it's the American Way. ...I hate to say this, but I think you need to contact a lawyer for this advice rather than yahoo.answers. Since this is something on which you will base business decisions, you really owe it to your... Without seeing the two pictures I can't say for sure it is, but if you have your signature on it, and can prove that you took it, and have a date and all of that, then you can file a suit agai... yes ...The only way, really, is to register it with the US copyright office. It costs you money but it does protect your rights. Especially if you are going to offer it up on the internet where anyone can... I THINK THEY ARE EQUALLY ILLEGAL the people at the mall were just lucky not to get caught or were under different circumstances + they were stating to COMPARE TO DESIGNERS and not passing... It has to be proven first and when proven that the espionage case was done by the country and not a company, then that is the time a case can be built with regard to economic relations with China. ... As someone who just graduated from law school and who actually wrote an essay on this topic, I have a bit of perspective on this. However, while you should never use this as an answer on a law sch... |
Categories--Copyright/IP Policy--Contact Webmaster |