If you still want to attend law school after having looked at the infographics posted here and here, watched my videos, and read my posts, take a look at this infographic: The Time is NOW to
Get into Law School by Ann Levine.
He writes about the sixteen days he spent sailing the Pacific Ocean with five buddies and a crate of canned meat, the time he took his kids on a world tour to eat ice cream with heads of state, his stubbornness in
getting into law school by sitting on a bench outside the dean's office for seven days until they finally let him enroll, his «office» at Tom Sawyer Island at Disneyland, the flowers he sent to the elderly woman who nearly killed him running a stop sign, the work he's done to free Ugandan children from prison.
Not exact matches
It's the
law and people like Mr. Yearwood (who in my opinion is an arrogant and insensitive man) does not care if a concerned mother like Mrs. Kimberly Puccia (who was only waiting to make sure that her child
got into the dance
school building safely) receive's a ticket
by one of his Traffic Agent's under his command.
She plays Elle Woods, the seemingly airheaded California girl who
gets dumped
by her aristocratic boyfriend, enrols
into Harvard
Law School to impress him and ends up a high - flying legal eagle in her own right.
Under a forty - year - old state
law, the scores that students earn on it — and only those scores — determine who
gets into, and rejected
by, these eight
schools, including the three old and famous ones: Stuyvesant, Bronx Science, and Brooklyn Tech.
The
law stipulates that if 50 percent +1 of the parents of children in a failing
school sign a petition, it can «trigger» a change in the governance of that
school either
by getting rid of some teachers, firing the principal, shutting the
school down or turning it
into a charter
school.
I am constantly hearing stories from alumni who were inspired
by him, who thank him for
getting them
into law school and starting their careers.»
And I suppose one of the most useful things a mentor can do, especially if you're engaging with somebody about to leave
law school or right out of
law school, is help them ease that transition
by offering yourself, your knowledge, and your skills, and your advice on how to
get your head out of the books and
into the practice.
By studying hard,
getting good grades that raise your GPA, and submitting an excellent thesis that shows your critical thinking, reasoning skills and insight
into ethics and justice, you'll strengthen your application to
law school at postgraduate level in the future.
You can certainly argue about the problems faced
by racialized communities and how that would impact their odds of
getting into a Canadian
law school, and you can put forward proposals to help them
get in.
A number of people in Quebec were annoyed that the Supreme Court of Canada struck down a provincial
law that prohibited people from
getting their kids
into English - stream public education
by sending them first to an English - language private
school.
By the way — this is not to denigrate mature students — if one can
get into a
law school as a mature student, without any form of undergraduate degree, then what does that say about the claim that the JD indicates the
law school degree is a 2d professional degree?