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Advice for the 0Ls

Book and notebook

The acceptance letters are out and the 0Ls  are announcing themselves. Hi.

As a crusty rising 3L, I don’t blog about school much anymore. Law school lost its new car smell about a year ago. The pedals stick, and the engine leaks.

But I remember how useful law student blogs were to me during the summer before law school, so I feel obligated to throw some unsolicited advice out into the interweb. Grab your salt, and guard your loins.

And don’t worry. I’ll be concise. Here are 5 points:

1. Reconsider going to law school.

Now, when I tell an accepted law student to read Philalawyer’s letter, I get the same response: “Oh, well, gee, that sounds TERRIBLE! But well, it’ll be different for me.”

I have three things to say to that:

  1. You may be smart, but you are an idiot.
  2. You are the equivalent of the 18 year olds signing up for the military during a war, many of whom turn out not to be bulletproof.
  3. You could do worse.

Just like joining the military is preferable to say, doing meth, law school is also not a terrible mistake for most people. It may be a waste of three years of your life and a lot of money, but again, it’s not meth. You’ll be fine. Maybe.

So, for those of you soldiering on,


2. Summer reading

If you only read one thing, then read “First Impressions: What You Don’t Know About How Others See You” by Ann Demarais and Valerie White.

The most jarring thing about law school is the amount of unchecked douchebaggery going around. It’s absolutely shocking and needs to stop.

I am pretty sure that classroom etiquette sessions are part of my school’s orientation schedule next year, but the vast majority if schools don’t offer these sessions, so it is your duty not to be “that student” during orientation.

Also visit student blogs and go through the archives. Law student blogs are best orientation you can get.

Some of the classic law student blogs include: But No Thanks, Butterflyfish, and New Kid on the Hallway. But check the rest of the blogs linked on the left side of the page, and those linked at Evan Schaeffer’s Legal Underground.


3. Orientation: I’ve written about this before, and I think my 5 rules are pretty solid:

  1. Dress Appropriately. Advice and debate is here, but the gist is that you need to wipe the ramen from your shirt and look put together.
  2. Check the hormones, aka, fluid exchange should not be a part of the greeting process in professional school.
  3. Check the ego, or your classmates will know you’re an asshole.
  4. Don’t overshare, or your classmates will know you’re a hot mess.
  5. Hold the hooch, because the evidence will be on facebook forever.

4. Student loan money

Schools are oddly silent about this. Basically, if you take the full amount of student loans you will probably have around $1,000 per month to live on. But student loans can come very late, so make sure you have enough money for your deposit, first month’s rent, furniture, books, and whatever other living supplies you need, like food, if you’re into that. ‘

Considering putting off law school to work and save if you have to, because you are at a material disadvantage to Timmy Trustfund and Sally Second-Career when you are struggling to pay rent during 1L year.

And frankly, if you didn’t get into a top 10 law school and got a full ride to a law school in say, the top 100, then going debt-free is a good idea.

If you are unemployed after graduating from Underwhelming Law School (#70) then at least you are debt-free, whereas if you went into debt for Okay University School of Law (#35) and didn’t get a job, then you’re just a trapeze artist in debt, and, well, screwed.


5. Blog!

Go to wordpress.com and start your blog today. There are many reasons to blog, including:

  1. Journaling your experience, because having an archive of a semester is priceless.
  2. Efficiently keeping in touch with your friends and family.
  3. Managing your web presence.
  4. Networking with lawyers, peers, and a community of law student bloggers throughout the world.

More on that is here. I also have some tips on how to avoid getting into trouble.

That’s it grasshoppers. My duty to offer my one-and-a-half cents is fulfilled, and I will now return to blogging about dogs, drag queens, and music production.

If you do, somehow, have any more questions then tweet me at @dennisjansen or hit up Huma, who is far more competent, although slightly violent, at @huma_rashid.

13 Comments

  • Lisa
    June 22, 2010 at 10:50 pm

    Philalawyer raises some good points. A lot of people do delude themselves about job prospects & the lucrativeness of law. I want to do public interest, so I’ve already adjusted my salary expectations; I also plan to apply for jobs in and outside of law anyway. But if all else fails, I’m getting my teacher certification and spoonfeeding literature & US history to high school kids.

    Reply
    • Jansen
      June 23, 2010 at 1:39 am

      The people with public-interest goals are in for a thrill because you guys are more needed than ever! Sure that may mean an unpaid internship or two, but if you start while you’re in school it’ll be fine.

      Reply
  • 2nd Time Around
    June 22, 2010 at 11:43 pm

    Thanks for the advice and especially this post!!! I have been following your blog for awhile and it was one of (few) blogs that gave me the courage to start mine…

    Reply
    • Jansen
      June 23, 2010 at 1:38 am

      Muhaha! Thank you! Just remember that most blogs die within the first semester of law school, so keep it up.

      Reply
  • New Kid on the Hallway
    June 23, 2010 at 8:58 am

    Classic law student blog? Awwww…. I’m flattered! 🙂

    (I’ve reached the point where I have to block out all the people saying what a bad idea law school is. But it’s very good advice for people who haven’t already made the plunge.)

    Reply
    • Jansen
      June 23, 2010 at 9:27 am

      Your writing is amazing. You’re a insta-classic!

      And at least at my school, there are a ton of us who went to law school, and my particular law school, because we wanted job security. We then find out that our school is actually not as prestigious as we thought it was and that the extra $ didn’t buy us job security or any guarantee of employment.

      That’s why law school a terrible idea, especially for students who came straight from undergrad and have no other qualifications.

      Reply
      • New Kid on the Hallway
        June 23, 2010 at 12:51 pm

        Heh. And your school is more prestigious than mine is! (Although I guess it helps that mine doesn’t pretend to be more prestigious than it is – it’s a good regional school, and doesn’t really try to be otherwise. I don’t understand the people who come here who want to practice across the country from here, but that’s a different story.)

        I think the good thing about going to law school after another career is that you have to really think about what it is you want to do and why – you have to actively choose to stop doing something else and do this instead. Whereas coming straight out of undergrad, it’s way too easy to say, “I don’t know what to do with my liberal arts degree, if I stay in school/get a professional degree it’s bound to get me a job!” I’m not blaming anyone who thinks that way – it’s pretty much why I got a Ph.D. after undergrad, and partly why I went to law school now – but it doesn’t really represent how law school works (at least, now). Schools (law or undergrad) don’t seem to be very good at getting that message across, though.

        Reply
        • Jansen
          June 23, 2010 at 4:58 pm

          Well because far fewer people would go to law school if they realized what the true job prospects are, or the legal profession’s job insecurity and workload.

          Part of this is because the profession is romanticized on TV and in books, and the other part is that students and schools have nothing to gain by telling people what a scam this whole system is.

          But alas, I’ll be a good, highly educated barista.

          Reply
  • StrangeDicta
    June 23, 2010 at 12:19 pm

    Philalawyers article is fair and applies mostly to recent college grads. Not all OLs are in that position though.
    Most law students and lawyers seem to have such jaded views on the idea or OL’s wanting to go to law school. I’ve had lawyers tell me point blank “Don’t go to law school” as if that would somehow automatically dissuade me from wanting to go. I’ve never quite understood it. They say this before they even find out why I want to go to law school and if I know what I’m in for.

    It’s already scary enough for me to quit my job, move to a different state and assume so much debt, I kind of wish there was someone out there who would write about the benefits of going to law school…then again, I also wish I had a unicorn.

    Reply
  • Law Student
    June 24, 2010 at 6:46 pm

    I’d also refer 0Ls to any of the blogs mentioned herein:

    http://blogs.wsj.com/law/2010/03/29/thinking-about-law-school-these-blogs-tells-you-why-you-shouldnt/

    And their associated blog-kin.

    Reply
  • Fridays from the Frontline » Clear Admit: Law School Admissions Blog
    June 25, 2010 at 8:07 am

    […] law school grade inflation, and expressed a few frustrations and concerns. Minnesota ’11 Jansen provided a few tidbits of advice for 0Ls. 2L Law School Ninja offered similar advice for matriculating law students. 3L Sharon summed up a […]

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