Options
Taking the biggest test of my life tomorrow!
Taking the lsat tomorrow, wish me luck, Post a coin that you worked really hard for!
0
Comments
Best of luck!!!
Michael Kittle Rare Coins --- 1908-S Indian Head Cent Grading Set --- No. 1 1909 Mint Set --- Kittlecoins on Facebook --- Long Beach Table 700
I think you'll find, when it comes time to take the bar exam, that it's a whole lot more work than the LSAT. But hey, that's 3+ years from now
The Beatles
<< <i>yeah but if I dont do well on this test I won't even get a chance to do poorly on the bar
Law's a tough profession. And I say this as someone who has done well at it. Unless you can get into a good law school... think carefully about whether it makes sense to go! There's a good website at www.abovethelaw.com that talks about "inside" law career stuff. Read some of the news on there before you apply.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
<< <i>Hey! I remember that exam. I took it after working 'til 4:00 a.m. putting the next day's newspaper to bed. Piece of cake.
wow are you superman?
<< <i>Asking them, that is.
Longacre enjoys the power of the pen.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Don't be silly.
<< <i>And BTW, the LSAT is not an indicator of how well you will do in law school. Mrs. Longacre blew me away on the LSATs, but she wasn't anywhere near me in class rank at the end of 3 years. >>
haha trying to get a jab in anyway you can lol, so two lawyers in the Longacre household, wouldnt want to get on your bad side!
.......
<< <i>Great...another lawyer! Good luck on your test. >>
another lunatic lawyer
best of luck,
but you know that luck pays no part in test taking,
it's preparation.
<< <i>Don't do it. I once read a survey in the California Bar Journal that if lawyers could make the same money doing something else, they would quit being lawyers. >>
That's exactly the problem with Californians. Everyone wants to find gold bricks on their front lawn while sitting firmly on their arse.
But, she certainly out ranks you now!
Here in Virginia one can apprentice at law, take the bar exam and you're in.
taking State, Fed and International exams that whenever I didn't know how I did (no feeling
of acing) I did just fine. So, if you have no clue as to the outcome it's probably A-OK!
Have a drink, relax and the results will be just great! (oh, I forgot, this is the age of electronics
and you may already know the results)!
bob
Fellas, leave the tight pants to the ladies. If I can count the coins in your pockets you better use them to call a tailor. Stay thirsty my friends......
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Do you get a "you suck?"
or a "you sucked?"
Just kidding. I took it several times trying to do better. Its a terrible test.
You aint seen nothing yet. Wait until the Bar Exams rolls around. Then you will worry.
Good Luck!
We will find out in about three weeks whether my impression is accurate. Hope you get the score you were aiming for.
And for the record in response to a comment about the bar exam-- I took the New York bar exam and the Connecticut bar exam. I also took the CPA exam. In my opinion, the bar exams were a joke (with a capital J) compared to the CPA exam. And Longacre is bad at taking standardized tests, and I could not believe how easy the bar exams were.
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
<< <i>
<< <i>yeah but if I dont do well on this test I won't even get a chance to do poorly on the bar
Law's a tough profession. And I say this as someone who has done well at it. Unless you can get into a good law school... think carefully about whether it makes sense to go! There's a good website at www.abovethelaw.com that talks about "inside" law career stuff. Read some of the news on there before you apply. >>
In this economy, good law school means Yale, Harvard or Stanford. I wouldn't advise paying full price for anywhere else. If you can get a good scholarship, you could also go to Columbia, NYU, or Chicago. If you get a great scholarship, you could go to Penn, Michigan, UVA, Northwestern, Boalt, Duke, Cornell, or Georgetown.
Employment prospects will be severely limited from any other schools. If possible, keep taking the LSAT until you get a score with a 7 in the middle, and then only go to one of the above schools.
<< <i> Taking the biggest test of my life tomorrow! >>
so...hows your day?
AUandAG I hope your right! I felt my performance on the test was ok, truly could go either way. But I am very happy to get it out of the way unless I have to retake in december!
I agree. I never did very well on the LSAT. I easily passed the Indiana Bar Exam the first time I took it. Although that may be true, I was referring to all of the anticipation and worrying involved leading up to the Bar Exam...knowing that the only thing between you and your future is a silly Bar Exam result. With proper preparation one should pass with ease.
I hope the score comes back the way you want it to. My wife took it about 45 days ago. She scored about what she expected. Now the daunting task (for her) of applying to schools. I saw some of the questions...yikes...especially when you have such a short time to answer.
Please visit my website Millcitynumismatics.com
<< <i>IMHO, motivated students do fine wherever they attend law school. I've also observed that the lawyers who earn the most money are usually street-smart people who graduate from third or fourth-tier schools, wear shoes with worn-out soles, and talk like Huck Finn. >>
This is terrible advice for a young person who may very likely go $150K to $200K into debt for law school. Working for a large law firm is the only way to earn enough money to pay off this kind of debt within a reasonable time frame. Large law firms only hire people from top schools or students at the very very top of the class from lesser schools.
Yes, a handful of graduates from regional law schools turn out to be very successful. That doesn't help the thousands of others who struggle along with low wages or no job at all. A young person can easily ruin his financial future by attending a low ranked law school. Student loan debt cannot be discharged in bankruptcy.
Not sure of that. In fact, not even close.
I do not fir into your profile above and I am doing just fine.
<< <i>This is terrible advice
Not sure of that. In fact, not even close.
I do not fir into your profile above and I am doing just fine.
A first year associate at a large law firm earns $160,000 a year base salary plus bonus, straight out of law school.
If you went to a no name law school, I'd bet it took you 5 to 10 years before you made comparable money. Even then, you'd be the lucky rare exception.
I'm just a small town Chief Public Defender from a no namer in eastern Ohio. What the hell do I know?
Good luck to the OP. Do what your heart tells you!
siliconvalleycoins.com
I took the RN exam many years ago, in Louisville, Ky. I experienced a sinking feeling on the ride home as those of us in the car remembered questions and I heard intelligent classmates saying they had answered differently from myself. I was in that I don't know how I did category but eventually found I had scored well. If you have doubts about your test results you may still end up doing OK.
After working for several years I started buying a few of these
> As with most things in life, hard work and integrity are the crucial ingredients for success as a lawyer.
I can't think of anything in life that doesn't go better when you're into hard work and integrity
Didn't wanna get me no trade
Never want to be like papa
Working for the boss every night and day
--"Happy", by the Rolling Stones (1972)
Candidly, I don't recommend law school in most other circumstances. Especially if you have to borrow $50k a year to attend a second, third, or fourth tier law school. It's too expensive and frankly the payoff at that point is very speculative.
Since we're dropping names, I went to pretty good law school (Georgetown) and work in a big law firm in Chicago. So I have a little experience here