Monthly Archive for March, 2008

10 Ways to Ensure Success in Law School

If you’re considering entering law school or already a new student the intimidation factor can be overwhelming. Anyone who has gone through the rigors of a three-year law school program will tell you it gets less threatening as you advance. In order to get through these three years you’re going to need a lot of help. Here are some tips for you to consider as you begin your journey:

  1. Stay on top of your reading assignments. The workload will be unlike any you have encountered in the past and it’s imperative you do all the assigned readings. It is helpful to refresh with the readings just before you attend class.
  2. Speak up. Class participation is not usually factored into your grades so don’t be afraid to jump into a class discussion. It’s your chance to either strut your stuff or to clarify ambiguities you’ve encountered in the course materials.
  3. Go to class. Even if your professor doesn’t take attendance you should make every effort to make it to class. There are sure to be times when you haven’t done the reading and you feel like taking the easy way out. Avoid this urge and still go to class, at least this way you can hear what the professor feels is most important about a particular case.
  4. Listen to your professor. Only take notes of what the professor says. He or she is the one paid to present the material. Certainly listen to your classmates but don’t take their points and opinions as Gospel.
  5. Reflect on your notes at the end of each day. Take a close look at the notes you took earlier in the day in class when you get home. This will allow you to soak up and reinforce the day’s message. Repeat this process at the end of each week.
  6. Learn the rules. It may sound redundant, but you’re in law school so you should learn to accurately explain legal rules.
  7. Worry about the context. Classes are intended to revolve around discussions to reach a conclusion. Don’t be concerned with knowing the right answer right away - this isn’t the aim of a discussion.
  8. Find a comfortable seat in class. If you’re taking notes the old-fashioned way with a pen and a pad then avoid the guy pounding away on his laptop.
  9. Quality, not quantity. Put in valuable time, not just hours upon hours for the sake of looking good. Only you will know the extent of your effort. Make sure the time you study is done wisely.
  10. Classes are difficult. Accept the struggle that is going to accompany your journey. If one class session has you feeling lost, try to master the material in your own time and be prepared for the next meeting.

Susan Jacobs is a freelance writer as well as a regular contributor for CollegeDegree.com, a site helping students select an online college degree. Susan invites your questions, comments and freelancing job inquiries at her email address susan.jacobs45@gmail.com.

Call for Contributions at LawVibe: Law School Blog

I am looking for partner bloggers to blog on LawVibe on topics relating to law - such as general law and legal topics, law school, being a law student, being a lawyer, starting your solo practice, law firm topics, etc. As of now I have no limits to the amount of bloggers I’d like to have on the LawVibe team - I have very high expectations of this site and can see LawVibe becoming the website of choice when people think about law websites, blogs, and forums.

I would prefer a blogger who has some experience either as a law student or in the legal field in general and with writing ability (no need to be Shakespeare either though, don’t get me wrong). I can handle most grammar/spelling editing (I will moderate your work initially) so no worries there. Don’t be afraid to apply if you’re a paralegal or in another legal profession, you’re more than welcome.

Coblogger Details

  • I would like consistent work from you - I’m looking for a minimum of one full sized article per week (500-2000 words each).
  • Please give me examples of your writing - it may be in a blog format or otherwise.
  • If you currently run a law or legal related blog that is definitely a plus.

Benefits for youI really want this to be a team concept. We’re all a part of the LawVibe team pushing the website higher and higher. Of course, if our relationship goes well, profits generated from LawVibe will be shared with you - the more popular our website becomes, more money paid.

Links to your website or blog is acceptable in signatures and within your articles when it is relevant - which will bring you traffic and new readers.

Your public profile will be elevated - if you deliver consistent good content, you’ll have an author page on LawVibe to discuss yourself, a portrait, and future plans - definitely good for networking on the entire web.

There will be no real limits on the content you can create but of course inside the bounds of general law/legal topics - whether news or opinion pieces. I will be the content editor initially and can guide you if you need help with anything - including topic ideas. Initially I will moderate contributions.

Applications

If you are truly interested in this opportunity, if you want to join a forward-thinking team of LawVibe writers ready to lift LawVibe into the one of the top legal blogs on the internet, and you’re ready to commit yourself to consistent original new content, then make sure to apply and fill out the form. Thanks and good luck!

How to Be Fulfilled as a Solo Lawyer

From Susan Cartier Liebel:

“To pursue something difficult you will need commitment, focus and confidence.  You will need the promise of gaining a significant outcome and a sense of fulfillment. If your goals do not move you, if they do not inspire and incite you to action, then you have not found the right goals.” (David Niven, Ph. D.)

Going solo is a life altering step.  It means you are in charge of your income…you, alone.  You are in charge of the clients you will take on and the satisfaction you will derive from spending countless hours working with them and for them on their legal matters.  You will be responsible for the marketing, bookkeeping, billing, adhering to the rules of professional conduct and more.  You will be responsible for running a complete business. The only safety net is you.  AND you and your family will be the beneficiaries of you having challenged yourself to create your own future, taking on the clients you choose to take on, being responsible for running a legal services business and all this entails.  If this goal does not engage all your senses, excite you at the unlimited possibilities (and fear can be mixed with excitement…they are not mutually exclusive.) then you need to rethink your choices.

But consider this:

When end-of-career (managers) discussed their relative success and moments of peak performance during their careers, more than half spoke in terms of the significance of personal fulfillment.  (Thornton, F., G. Privette, and C. Bundrick 1999. “Peak Performance of Business Leaders: And Experience Parallel to Self-Actualization Theory.” Journal of Business and Psychology 14:253-64.)

Most people want a sense of personal fulfillment for all the hours they have committed to working during their lives.  Solos get to fashion their work lives around their personal goals, their personal goals around their professional goals.  No one said it isn’t hard work, it surely is. But if you get excited by the idea of going solo, it moves and inspires you to action, then you have found the right goal. And if you aspire to achieve a significant sense of personal fulfillment and you’ve determined this career path can lead you to gain this fulfillment, then you need to go for it.   And don’t for one second believe creating a legal services business you built by scratch is the end…it is just the beginning.  So many other opportunities can arise in the course of building your business, some you may have contemplated, others not.  But you have the chance to grab hold of them because you are in charge of how you delegate your time.

And for those who feel this is not their true goal, but they have no choice, everything in life is a choice.  We may not always get to choose between two shiny red apples, but if you rethink your expectation of the fruit, they can both make delicious applesauce.