Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Outlines online .... and I can use it!
As a continuation of my previous post
So, yes, I must say, if you want to be in a large law firm, get good grades.
Monday, November 08, 2010
Do bad grades impact your success on the bar exam?
An aforementioned article talked about grades in a law school. The article’s point was that grades will follow you during all your life. Some law school professors concluded that law school grades have both short-term and a long-term impact on student’s life. Put it differently (as I understood that article), if you are a C student, you are going to be a loser for all your professional life. [Indeed, I may have biased view on such issues, since I am one of the “not-in-the-top-50%-of-the-class” students.]
I believe there is some truth to such statement, as I was convinced by my own experience of rejections for job interviews (I am not even talking about getting an interview) and since I am more than sure that rejections occurred because of my crappy grades.
From my communication with practicing attorneys, I learnt that the grades definitely have a short-term impact: as a job applicant and a young attorney you do not have an experience and your grades are what a potential employer will look at with hopes to find out about your diligence in work and learning. However, after getting some experience, it is your professional skills that is important for an employer but not your grades you have received five years ago.
But who knows, maybe I do not know much about current legal job market and I am wrong about long-term impact. I will let my future to prove the accuracy of article’s conclusions.
What made me upset, mad and irritated is this article’s statement: grades impact student’s success on the bar exam. According to the author, grades constitute 70% of student’s chances to pass a bar exam. What? What bullshit? [Pardon my French]. Here I am, a no-so-good student with crappy grades who passed the bar exam from the first time, and there are students, who had much better grades than I do and they DID NOT pass. How will the author [or whoever made that conclusion] explain my situation?
Why am I saying all this? I think I understand good motivations of the author for writing that article—he/she wanted to develop in 1Ls that desire to get “good grades” that by all means will assist a future young attorney to find a decent job that will help to pay student loans. This is a good intention, no doubt. But what the author did not take into account, is that there are B- and C students who need different motivation and may read that unsupported crap and believe in failure on the bar exam and, later, in profession.
In other words, think positive, law students whatever grades you have. There are thousands of examples, that show different reality. Professor, on the other hand, should stick to their Socratic Method.
Saturday, November 06, 2010
International Tax Blog: International Financial Scams - Overseas Investments, Lotteries, Inheritances, Gifts, etc.
International Tax Blog: International Financial Scams - Overseas Investments, Lotteries, Inheritances, Gifts, etc.
Tuesday, November 02, 2010
Sunday, October 31, 2010
Brief Update: the life is going on
Taking my story back to summer of 2010, I will repeat that June and July were HELL because of preparation for the Bar Exam and the exam itself. August, however, was more relaxing. Unfortunately, we did not travel as much as we did last year. But Utah's national park and local lake were great. The weekdays I spent cleaning a house and watching TV. Unfortunately, I did not do much of reading, which I had planned to do after the bar exam. I explain this fact by a want to recover from a disastrous "brain damage" bar preparation caused to my delicate mind.
Starting from September I am a full-time student pursuing an LLM in Taxation degree. I am enjoying studying tax. It does not seem boring to me at all, as might seem to many other people. It is not so easy either. But most important I love it. The program is intense and that makes it not much different from a law school program. As a result I am often tired by the end of the week. But successful passing the bar exam and following swearing-in ceremony are the best motivation for me and my efforts in being successful. It was very hard to believe that I made it so far. But I did and hopefully will keep the same pace.
Friday, October 29, 2010
Saturday, October 09, 2010
I passed the Bar Exam!!!
I passed!!! I did it!!! I cannot believe it!!! I do not know what to say except maybe that I never ever should lose a confidence in my abilities. The fact that I PASSED shows that studying hard will be paid off sooner or later [better sooner, of course]!
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Article Florida Law - Writing Letters
Article Florida Law - HOW TO WRITE LETTERS NONLAWYERS WILL READ
Saturday, July 31, 2010
Bar Advisor
Bar Advisor: "do not blog (publicly) about the bar exam until AFTER you have passed it.
Why do I say this? To begin with, a blog requires lots of psychic energy to maintain. When you draft a post, you want it to be interesting,
well-written, and timely. You worry about it before you send it off into the blogosphere where anyone can read it. When you are studying for the bar
examination, you do not have time for such a distraction and drain of mental resources.
Next, constant and public worry about failing the bar exam (which is what the majority of these bar-exam blog posts contain) will begin to infiltrate your mind and create an expectation of failure. You may not believe it, but it is true. And, guess what, if you fail, you'll be able to continue blogging about how much you hate the bar exam and your loyal readers will keep reading your posts. This is a sick form of codependency."
Tuesday, July 13, 2010
Court strikes down FCC indecency policy | Reuters
Anxiety…start
It is 5 am in the morning. I am sitting on my porch in darkness with my laptop (thank you a person who created Wi-Fi). From today it is exactly 2 weeks before an exam and I am SCARED! Took a test yesterday and got frustrated – missed plenty of the points (EASY point) and forgot the simplest rules, made wrong assumptions and conclusions (EASY ones). Will I be able in two weeks to get to the point when I can say I know at least 50% of the material and PLUS I can recognize the issues? I do not know and frankly afraid of thinking of.
This is no good!
Yesterday all night I was dreaming about MPT test – what I did wrong and why, and how I should have done. MPT is the hardest part of the test for me. It is very upsetting to read how people do not even practice MPT (I do not know, however, whether they do well). They say they are doing well. I do not miss issues, but I am a very slow writer, and, frankly, I am not a good writer. As a result of lack of confidence and slowness I cannot finish even a half of the writing.
Practice, practice, practice. I am saying this to myself. Bar/Bri says. Websites say. I will try and I will see what happen; though, I am prepared for the worst.
Sunday, July 11, 2010
Tough times: this summer does not exist for me, unfortunately
I was keeping myself from blogging, because I wanted to post some kind of introduction after a long absence. You see, a law school is behind now (and no regret about it). I thought maybe some thoughts related to the past three years would be a good way to open a new page of my life. But, frankly, I do not know what to write. Three years passed quickly and with many difficulties, grey thoughts and doubts. I do not think I want to look back and show my regrets or misery, if there were such (or maybe I just do not want to confess. I cannot say I had a fun time in a law school. Pressure of good grades, strong and continuous competition had been sucking out all my energy and desire to be happy and just enjoy life. Definitely I did not choose a right course of life: I did not do what I like to do (read fiction, travel, communicate with people), but selected sitting with textbooks or just doing nothing while weeping about my unhappy days in a law school. By no means have these sentences had a purpose to discourage new law school applicants from going to school (though you would better think before you make such decision). It is just a warning that before you want to bind your life with a law school, you should prepare yourself for hard work and stressful life.
Overall, it would be a lie if I say I have not enjoyed my L years in full. I loved clinic, I loved practicing law (although it was only as a student-attorney), I loved learning tricks and dark corners of tax and business law. But I hated law school exams, outlines and useless theory which is useless in the preparation for the bar exam.
Anyway, since a bar preparation is in its high peak and taking all my thoughts and dreams, I often wish to scribble something here for my own memory and perhaps even for some occasional reader of this blog as a note how it is done, how it should not be done, how it could be done and some other mixed thoughts. Since my communication is incredibly limited during those days—husband and computer—I have a need in some relief, although I'll speak to nobody.
Sunday, April 04, 2010
Happy Easter!!!
This morning started for me in blue: no time to cook except boiled eggs (since I have spent 5 hours of TV watching yesterday), bad news from home (my mom does not feel well), no time for fun (the amount of work to be done before Monday is enormous).
Yeap, this is how it goes.
Monday, March 22, 2010
I will be short
So how things were going in my life?
I had a huge load of work (and I am still having it) for my clinic. I have completed my first 35-page LLC operating agreement and now waiting for a feedback from supervising attorneys. The end of the semester is approaching rapidly but I did not do my outlining and I hate even to think about it. I work a little on networking and so far it goes well.
I betrayed my blogs by setting up Twitter account. I will be honest, I do not enjoy Twitter, since I appear to be unskillful 140-symbols typist -- I always want to write more (hey, you will never tell by my dedication to blogging, right?). However, a Twitter is a great tool to follow news. So I subscribed to WSJ legal news feed, a bunch of blogs of entrepreneurial and business lawyers and Twitter subscriptions are still open to expansion.
I have got a couple of thoughts to write about but there is no promise I'll do that.
Now back to work which I did not begin doing yet.
Cheers!
Monday, March 15, 2010
Who else can understand this if not a law student?
Thursday, January 28, 2010
Energy can be a key
Now I have a homework to do: come up with a list of attorneys whom I might approach, sign up for a bunch of social networks etc. We'll see how it goes.
Wednesday, January 27, 2010
Procrastination is possibly as old as prostitution
- read email
- read LiveJournal
- looked at some pictures (bless God no comments leaving)
- read my Google Reader
- glanced at Reuters news
- glanced at my clock and decided that I have another 3 minutes to write a blog post.
here I am! Writing!
My time for procrastination is over, I have 2 hours to read those loooong 15 pages for M&A
My Advanced Contracts partner showed up. I made him waiting yesterday. Well he should have read my email. Now I need to pick the subject for our contract draft. I have no idea what I would like to choose. Talked to librarian who gave a valuable advice -- go and read contract forms, in other words, use what was already done.
Tuesday, January 26, 2010
OA or AI?
I was reading for my Biz planning class, and realized that I have asked yesterday a very stupid question during a clinic session. One of the students told that they are working on operating agreement and I have asked what type of entity is their client: "LLC or corporation?" Hellooooo, corporations have articles of incorporations. Only LLCs and partnerships may have operating agreement. Again, I disgraced myself!
