- This topic has 310 replies, 14 voices, and was last updated 13 years, 7 months ago by bearishgurl.
-
AuthorPosts
-
May 13, 2011 at 6:16 PM #696543May 13, 2011 at 8:20 PM #695369bearishgurlParticipant
[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]north park girl, these recent “law school graduates” are SO HAPPY to be able to get the opportunity to do the work that I’m doing (paralegal) but they don’t know the CA Rules of Court and local rules which you have to have in your head in this business. (They don’t teach this in law school, btw.)
It is TRUE that many firms are outsourcing this task (esp small firms). I am “independent” and am offered more work than I want or even have time to do.
I feel sorry for these new “debtors with no escape.” I have never set foot in a law school (as a law student) and couldn’t qualify to be admitted.
May 13, 2011 at 8:20 PM #695456bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]north park girl, these recent “law school graduates” are SO HAPPY to be able to get the opportunity to do the work that I’m doing (paralegal) but they don’t know the CA Rules of Court and local rules which you have to have in your head in this business. (They don’t teach this in law school, btw.)
It is TRUE that many firms are outsourcing this task (esp small firms). I am “independent” and am offered more work than I want or even have time to do.
I feel sorry for these new “debtors with no escape.” I have never set foot in a law school (as a law student) and couldn’t qualify to be admitted.
May 13, 2011 at 8:20 PM #696057bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]north park girl, these recent “law school graduates” are SO HAPPY to be able to get the opportunity to do the work that I’m doing (paralegal) but they don’t know the CA Rules of Court and local rules which you have to have in your head in this business. (They don’t teach this in law school, btw.)
It is TRUE that many firms are outsourcing this task (esp small firms). I am “independent” and am offered more work than I want or even have time to do.
I feel sorry for these new “debtors with no escape.” I have never set foot in a law school (as a law student) and couldn’t qualify to be admitted.
May 13, 2011 at 8:20 PM #696204bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]north park girl, these recent “law school graduates” are SO HAPPY to be able to get the opportunity to do the work that I’m doing (paralegal) but they don’t know the CA Rules of Court and local rules which you have to have in your head in this business. (They don’t teach this in law school, btw.)
It is TRUE that many firms are outsourcing this task (esp small firms). I am “independent” and am offered more work than I want or even have time to do.
I feel sorry for these new “debtors with no escape.” I have never set foot in a law school (as a law student) and couldn’t qualify to be admitted.
May 13, 2011 at 8:20 PM #696558bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]north park girl, these recent “law school graduates” are SO HAPPY to be able to get the opportunity to do the work that I’m doing (paralegal) but they don’t know the CA Rules of Court and local rules which you have to have in your head in this business. (They don’t teach this in law school, btw.)
It is TRUE that many firms are outsourcing this task (esp small firms). I am “independent” and am offered more work than I want or even have time to do.
I feel sorry for these new “debtors with no escape.” I have never set foot in a law school (as a law student) and couldn’t qualify to be admitted.
May 13, 2011 at 9:00 PM #695384bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]…WHEN Mr. Wallerstein started at Thomas Jefferson (in Old Town San Diego) he was in no mood for austerity. He borrowed so much that before the start of his first semester he nearly put a down payment on a $350,000 two-bedroom, two-bath condo, figuring that the investment would earn a profit by the time he graduated. He was ready to ink the deal until a rep at the mortgage giant Countrywide asked if his employer at the time — a trade magazine publisher in New Jersey — would write a letter falsely stating that he was moving to San Diego for work.
“We were on a three-way call with my real estate agent and I said I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” he says. “The Countrywide guy chuckled and said, ‘Everyone lies on their mortgage application.’ ”
Instead, Mr. Wallerstein rented a spacious apartment. He also spent a month studying in the South of France and a month in Prague — all on borrowed money. There were cost-of-living loans, and tuition of about $33,000 a year. Later came a $15,000 loan to cover months of studying for the bar.
Today, his best guess is that he should be sending $2,000 to $3,000 a month in total, to lenders that include Wells Fargo, Citibank and Sallie Mae.
“There are a bunch of others,” he says. “I’m not really good at keeping records.”
Mr. Wallerstein didn’t know it at the time, but Thomas Jefferson leads the nation’s law schools in at least one category: 95 percent of students graduate with debt, the highest rate in the U.S. News rankings.
The reason, Ms. Kransberger says, is that many Thomas Jefferson students are either immigrants or, like Mr. Wallerstein, the first person in their family to get a law degree; statistically those are both groups with generally little or modest means. When Ms. Kransberger meets applicants engaged in what she calls “magical thinking” about their finances, she advises them to defer for a year or two until they are on stronger footing…
(bold emphasis added [and mine].)
May 13, 2011 at 9:00 PM #695471bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]…WHEN Mr. Wallerstein started at Thomas Jefferson (in Old Town San Diego) he was in no mood for austerity. He borrowed so much that before the start of his first semester he nearly put a down payment on a $350,000 two-bedroom, two-bath condo, figuring that the investment would earn a profit by the time he graduated. He was ready to ink the deal until a rep at the mortgage giant Countrywide asked if his employer at the time — a trade magazine publisher in New Jersey — would write a letter falsely stating that he was moving to San Diego for work.
“We were on a three-way call with my real estate agent and I said I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” he says. “The Countrywide guy chuckled and said, ‘Everyone lies on their mortgage application.’ ”
Instead, Mr. Wallerstein rented a spacious apartment. He also spent a month studying in the South of France and a month in Prague — all on borrowed money. There were cost-of-living loans, and tuition of about $33,000 a year. Later came a $15,000 loan to cover months of studying for the bar.
Today, his best guess is that he should be sending $2,000 to $3,000 a month in total, to lenders that include Wells Fargo, Citibank and Sallie Mae.
“There are a bunch of others,” he says. “I’m not really good at keeping records.”
Mr. Wallerstein didn’t know it at the time, but Thomas Jefferson leads the nation’s law schools in at least one category: 95 percent of students graduate with debt, the highest rate in the U.S. News rankings.
The reason, Ms. Kransberger says, is that many Thomas Jefferson students are either immigrants or, like Mr. Wallerstein, the first person in their family to get a law degree; statistically those are both groups with generally little or modest means. When Ms. Kransberger meets applicants engaged in what she calls “magical thinking” about their finances, she advises them to defer for a year or two until they are on stronger footing…
(bold emphasis added [and mine].)
May 13, 2011 at 9:00 PM #696072bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]…WHEN Mr. Wallerstein started at Thomas Jefferson (in Old Town San Diego) he was in no mood for austerity. He borrowed so much that before the start of his first semester he nearly put a down payment on a $350,000 two-bedroom, two-bath condo, figuring that the investment would earn a profit by the time he graduated. He was ready to ink the deal until a rep at the mortgage giant Countrywide asked if his employer at the time — a trade magazine publisher in New Jersey — would write a letter falsely stating that he was moving to San Diego for work.
“We were on a three-way call with my real estate agent and I said I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” he says. “The Countrywide guy chuckled and said, ‘Everyone lies on their mortgage application.’ ”
Instead, Mr. Wallerstein rented a spacious apartment. He also spent a month studying in the South of France and a month in Prague — all on borrowed money. There were cost-of-living loans, and tuition of about $33,000 a year. Later came a $15,000 loan to cover months of studying for the bar.
Today, his best guess is that he should be sending $2,000 to $3,000 a month in total, to lenders that include Wells Fargo, Citibank and Sallie Mae.
“There are a bunch of others,” he says. “I’m not really good at keeping records.”
Mr. Wallerstein didn’t know it at the time, but Thomas Jefferson leads the nation’s law schools in at least one category: 95 percent of students graduate with debt, the highest rate in the U.S. News rankings.
The reason, Ms. Kransberger says, is that many Thomas Jefferson students are either immigrants or, like Mr. Wallerstein, the first person in their family to get a law degree; statistically those are both groups with generally little or modest means. When Ms. Kransberger meets applicants engaged in what she calls “magical thinking” about their finances, she advises them to defer for a year or two until they are on stronger footing…
(bold emphasis added [and mine].)
May 13, 2011 at 9:00 PM #696219bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]…WHEN Mr. Wallerstein started at Thomas Jefferson (in Old Town San Diego) he was in no mood for austerity. He borrowed so much that before the start of his first semester he nearly put a down payment on a $350,000 two-bedroom, two-bath condo, figuring that the investment would earn a profit by the time he graduated. He was ready to ink the deal until a rep at the mortgage giant Countrywide asked if his employer at the time — a trade magazine publisher in New Jersey — would write a letter falsely stating that he was moving to San Diego for work.
“We were on a three-way call with my real estate agent and I said I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” he says. “The Countrywide guy chuckled and said, ‘Everyone lies on their mortgage application.’ ”
Instead, Mr. Wallerstein rented a spacious apartment. He also spent a month studying in the South of France and a month in Prague — all on borrowed money. There were cost-of-living loans, and tuition of about $33,000 a year. Later came a $15,000 loan to cover months of studying for the bar.
Today, his best guess is that he should be sending $2,000 to $3,000 a month in total, to lenders that include Wells Fargo, Citibank and Sallie Mae.
“There are a bunch of others,” he says. “I’m not really good at keeping records.”
Mr. Wallerstein didn’t know it at the time, but Thomas Jefferson leads the nation’s law schools in at least one category: 95 percent of students graduate with debt, the highest rate in the U.S. News rankings.
The reason, Ms. Kransberger says, is that many Thomas Jefferson students are either immigrants or, like Mr. Wallerstein, the first person in their family to get a law degree; statistically those are both groups with generally little or modest means. When Ms. Kransberger meets applicants engaged in what she calls “magical thinking” about their finances, she advises them to defer for a year or two until they are on stronger footing…
(bold emphasis added [and mine].)
May 13, 2011 at 9:00 PM #696573bearishgurlParticipant[quote=north park girl]…I was considering an MBA last year, even applying to a few top schools for technology (Stanford, MIT, Berkeley). After getting rejected from all three, I thought about casting a wider net, then saw this article about law school debt: http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/09/business/09law.html
[/quote]…WHEN Mr. Wallerstein started at Thomas Jefferson (in Old Town San Diego) he was in no mood for austerity. He borrowed so much that before the start of his first semester he nearly put a down payment on a $350,000 two-bedroom, two-bath condo, figuring that the investment would earn a profit by the time he graduated. He was ready to ink the deal until a rep at the mortgage giant Countrywide asked if his employer at the time — a trade magazine publisher in New Jersey — would write a letter falsely stating that he was moving to San Diego for work.
“We were on a three-way call with my real estate agent and I said I didn’t feel comfortable with that,” he says. “The Countrywide guy chuckled and said, ‘Everyone lies on their mortgage application.’ ”
Instead, Mr. Wallerstein rented a spacious apartment. He also spent a month studying in the South of France and a month in Prague — all on borrowed money. There were cost-of-living loans, and tuition of about $33,000 a year. Later came a $15,000 loan to cover months of studying for the bar.
Today, his best guess is that he should be sending $2,000 to $3,000 a month in total, to lenders that include Wells Fargo, Citibank and Sallie Mae.
“There are a bunch of others,” he says. “I’m not really good at keeping records.”
Mr. Wallerstein didn’t know it at the time, but Thomas Jefferson leads the nation’s law schools in at least one category: 95 percent of students graduate with debt, the highest rate in the U.S. News rankings.
The reason, Ms. Kransberger says, is that many Thomas Jefferson students are either immigrants or, like Mr. Wallerstein, the first person in their family to get a law degree; statistically those are both groups with generally little or modest means. When Ms. Kransberger meets applicants engaged in what she calls “magical thinking” about their finances, she advises them to defer for a year or two until they are on stronger footing…
(bold emphasis added [and mine].)
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.