http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Yor...First_district
1st district - Tim Bishop College of the Holy Cross, Long Island University 4th district - Carloyn Mcarthy Glen Cove Nursing School 5th District - Gregorgy Meeks Adelphi University, Howard University 6th District - Grace Meng University of Michigan Cardozo School of Law 11th district - Micheal Grimm Baruch College (B.B.A.) New York Law School (J.D. I could go on and on. About 70% of New York States Politicians are from state schools or little known universitys. Sure you have a sprinkling of ivy league in there but the majority of them are normal blue-blooded schools. If you look at a state like Ohio or Florida then 90% of the politicians are from local schools. Have a look for yourself http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Yor...First_district |
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you live in the state with the #1 worst amount of surplus lawyers in the country by far "The Lawyer Surplus, State by State" Quote:
i wish you the best of luck in your future endeavors in unemployment |
go to school to learn
apply for jobs to get employed if you try to do it any other way you're just gonna stress urself out imho |
o, and change ur fucking binds
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And don't tell me that we need to keep some things in the objective realm to even express ideas with any meaning, because I'm perfectly happy not talking to any of you and exploring the nature of value all by myself :mad: |
Hawkins already made philosophy obsolete sry
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However, the question is about playing the numbers. It's about intelligent decision making in light of the probabilities. Unless you have a specific plan that you've carefully weighed, it, generally speaking, is a less-than-good idea to go to a lower ranked school. It's like saying that a lot of billionaires are dropouts. This is true, but they succeeded in spite of that. At best, a lower tier school won't hurt, but a higher tier school CAN make a world of difference. Without a specific circumstance to tell you otherwise (like a very well thought out career plan), it doesn't make much financial sense to go to a poorly ranked school. I agree that the individual will get out of something equivalent to what they put in. However, the question is about the wisdom of attending a lower ranked school as a general matter. From a decision theory standpoint, its not unless you have a mitigating factor (scholarship, regionally dominant school, etc.) |
Those numbers are slightly inflated because they count total bar exams passed in New York State (your able to practice in 3-4 other states with your N.Y Bar License) so not everyone actually ends up working here. My degree is a dual pre-law/paralegal studies so that I will be able to get a job working at a corporate law firm that requires you have a bachelors degree (which most paraglegals don't). It's a great thing to fall back on because just a quick search of mean paralegal salary in NYC shows that its a great career to start in. My plan is to do law school at night while I'm working at my uncle's law firm as a paralegal. Again, the competition is fierce but not many jobs start you out at 100k+.
Jobs are competive in 2013 no matter what you plan on doing. Unless its physical labor then expect to have a bit of a hard time finding something right away. One just has to look at say I.T statistics and realize its pretty much nation wide. Job Outlook Employment of computer programmers is expected to increase 12 percent from 2010 to 2020, about as fast as the average for all occupations. Since computer programming can be done from anywhere in the world, companies often hire programmers in countries that have lower wages. P.S I'm genuinely curious as to what your profession is Stinkum? |
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Newsflash, getting a job in Law is much like getting a job in ANY field nowadays, the people who know people will always fare better than the people who don't. /thread
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