In addition to being prepared to answer questions about reliving your life, you should
practice other interview questions such as what your strongest and weakest attributes are and where you see yourself in five years.
Not exact matches
Working with your career office or from web resources including NALP's invaluable Insider's Guide to
Interviewing, arm your team with
questions that you expect to be asked from your resume, and
others that may be hard for you to answer (grades, interests, geography, resume gaps, etc.)
Practice a few behavioral
questions, too.
They are also making presentations at law schools, preparing
questions for
other students to use in job
interviews, and distributing examples of law firm best
practices.
Before the
interview,
practice answering some common
interview questions, either out loud in front of a mirror, or with
other people.
Create flashcards with
interview questions on one side and your answer on the
other and
practice your answers.
In
other words, you've written out and
practiced your answers to a dozen of the most common
interview questions, printed out the job description and any research on the company, and have 3 - 5
questions prepared to ask them at the end.
«Prepare for video
interviews in the same way as any
other element of the recruitment process — do your research on the firm and then practise answers to anticipated
questions (in the mirror and using the
practice test on the video
interview website).»
We can Google «How to answer tough
interview questions» and
practice our responses until we're blue in the mirror, but here are some
other important influences at play.
It's a good idea to
practice responses for
other common
interview questions too.
Just don't neglect the
other critical components of your
interview preparation (including
practice) to stress about brainteaser
questions.