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I'm currently a 1L in Law School and I absolutely hate it. I hate the people, the professors (professors in law school are the LAZIEST piece of ****, EVER), and the fact that the majority (98%) of the students are only motivated about getting good grades so they can make tons of money (that is literally their goal!? wtf). I guess I can't blame the students considering reputable firms will not even give someone an opportunity to interview unless they are in the top 15% of their class. It does not matter if you were the Deputy Minister of France, and recently e-mailed secretary of defense, Gates, and told him how to win the war in Afghanistan, while simultaneously invented the cure for AIDS, if your academic ranking is low, none of that **** is important!
Moving Forward, I seriously want to drop out of law school- I'm not motivated at all and dread doing work that I could care less about. I've always been interested in medical school, but I was dissuaded by my peers who convinced me that the sciences was way too hard to complete and I would ruin my chances of obtaining a good GPA (I am a first generation college student- so looking back I took advice from the wrong people- but when you didn't have anyone to help you- I guess any advice was good?).
I did some volunteering at a hospital in high school (I know- not impressive), 7 out of 9 aunts are nurses, I recently visited Haiti, (I'm Haitian and I lived there for 5 years) and witnessing all the devastating injuries and the doctors who were running around, trying to help as many people as possible, is really what confirmed that medicine is what I want to do for the rest of my life. As a volunteer, I enjoyed my interaction with the sick while helping medical professionals tend to their injuries.
If I decide to quit law school, I plan on doing some major shadowing!
I am thinking about a formal premed post bac programs and I have a couple of questions.
1) How hard is it for a non- science major (I honestly do not even remember what my core science classes were about) to do well (3.7 or above) in a Premed post bac program?
2) Taking standardized test has never been my strong suit. I barely broke 1000 on the SATS and did surprisingly okay on the LSATS (however, I didn't prepare at all, and English is my second language), so how hard would it be for me to do well on the MCATS (31 or above), if I study my a** off.
3) What is the culture of medical school? The culture at law school is COMPETITIVE (If you get good grades everyone hates, if you get bad grades your labeled a dummy)- I mean you compete for everything, Things that are not even of interest to you are competitive, not because they are of interest to anyone else, but because everyone, like yourself has reserved that thing, that is of no interest to no one, as their back up plan. Getting into law school is so easy- but doing well and getting a job is so hard. This is the life of a successful law school student who gets a GOOD job
1L- at the end of their first year they are in the top 10% of their class, compete and make law review (very competitive)- land a killer internship at a big firm so they can impress future employers or get an invitation to come back next summer (This is super hard to get- I applied for an internship and the coordinator told me, they received 5,000 applications for 17 spots).
2L- be in the top 10-15% of your class while managing law review, get an externship for credit, and also get an internship for the summer (hopefully the firm invites you to come back- and congratulations you have a job waiting for you when you graduate).
3L- if you have a job already waiting for you (just show up to class and don't **** up things too bad. If you do not have a job yet, be very scared!
And after you graduate you take the bar exam.
I hate this culture, because no really cares about "the whys" of things.
4) How hard is it to do well in medical school? In law school , the majority of your grades are based on 1 exam you have at the end of each course. It's a random fact pattern that you have never seen before, and you are graded on how well you apply your knowledge to the facts. Everyone knows their stuff going into the exam-its not about the law- but who can make the best and most creative arguments. It's about spotting issues and cleverly solving them in a very organized fashion. Tests are usually 3hrs long and the curve is crazy. My section consists of 84 students. In one course there was one A+, 4 A'S, 13 A-, 25 B+, and so on… You only have 1 chance to do well in each class.
5) Are non- science majors at a disadvantage going into medical school and competing with students who were bio/chem/physics majors? For law school your undergrad major is irrelevant, you can major in dance and do great. I do think English majors have a little advantage considering your exams entail writing for 3hrs.
6) What are some good medical internships/volunteering/work experience that I should look into?
7) Should I just finish law school, since I'm on a full ride?
Thank you for reading my very long post. My stats are:
3.8 high school GPA
3.76 UGPA (I majored in pre-law studies, double minor in business administration and international studies at a private University in NY).
Top 30% in law school. I'm on a full ride, and I am not disgruntled that I may not get a job b/c I've network tremendously throughout undergrad so I already have offers from diff places. I just hate law school and my future colleagues!
Very low SAT test score
One way to describe myself is a hard worker- I do not mind putting in the hours
I also apologize for the massive spelling errors- I'm typing all this on my BB.
Moving Forward, I seriously want to drop out of law school- I'm not motivated at all and dread doing work that I could care less about. I've always been interested in medical school, but I was dissuaded by my peers who convinced me that the sciences was way too hard to complete and I would ruin my chances of obtaining a good GPA (I am a first generation college student- so looking back I took advice from the wrong people- but when you didn't have anyone to help you- I guess any advice was good?).
I did some volunteering at a hospital in high school (I know- not impressive), 7 out of 9 aunts are nurses, I recently visited Haiti, (I'm Haitian and I lived there for 5 years) and witnessing all the devastating injuries and the doctors who were running around, trying to help as many people as possible, is really what confirmed that medicine is what I want to do for the rest of my life. As a volunteer, I enjoyed my interaction with the sick while helping medical professionals tend to their injuries.
If I decide to quit law school, I plan on doing some major shadowing!
I am thinking about a formal premed post bac programs and I have a couple of questions.
1) How hard is it for a non- science major (I honestly do not even remember what my core science classes were about) to do well (3.7 or above) in a Premed post bac program?
2) Taking standardized test has never been my strong suit. I barely broke 1000 on the SATS and did surprisingly okay on the LSATS (however, I didn't prepare at all, and English is my second language), so how hard would it be for me to do well on the MCATS (31 or above), if I study my a** off.
3) What is the culture of medical school? The culture at law school is COMPETITIVE (If you get good grades everyone hates, if you get bad grades your labeled a dummy)- I mean you compete for everything, Things that are not even of interest to you are competitive, not because they are of interest to anyone else, but because everyone, like yourself has reserved that thing, that is of no interest to no one, as their back up plan. Getting into law school is so easy- but doing well and getting a job is so hard. This is the life of a successful law school student who gets a GOOD job
1L- at the end of their first year they are in the top 10% of their class, compete and make law review (very competitive)- land a killer internship at a big firm so they can impress future employers or get an invitation to come back next summer (This is super hard to get- I applied for an internship and the coordinator told me, they received 5,000 applications for 17 spots).
2L- be in the top 10-15% of your class while managing law review, get an externship for credit, and also get an internship for the summer (hopefully the firm invites you to come back- and congratulations you have a job waiting for you when you graduate).
3L- if you have a job already waiting for you (just show up to class and don't **** up things too bad. If you do not have a job yet, be very scared!
And after you graduate you take the bar exam.
I hate this culture, because no really cares about "the whys" of things.
4) How hard is it to do well in medical school? In law school , the majority of your grades are based on 1 exam you have at the end of each course. It's a random fact pattern that you have never seen before, and you are graded on how well you apply your knowledge to the facts. Everyone knows their stuff going into the exam-its not about the law- but who can make the best and most creative arguments. It's about spotting issues and cleverly solving them in a very organized fashion. Tests are usually 3hrs long and the curve is crazy. My section consists of 84 students. In one course there was one A+, 4 A'S, 13 A-, 25 B+, and so on… You only have 1 chance to do well in each class.
5) Are non- science majors at a disadvantage going into medical school and competing with students who were bio/chem/physics majors? For law school your undergrad major is irrelevant, you can major in dance and do great. I do think English majors have a little advantage considering your exams entail writing for 3hrs.
6) What are some good medical internships/volunteering/work experience that I should look into?
7) Should I just finish law school, since I'm on a full ride?
Thank you for reading my very long post. My stats are:
3.8 high school GPA
3.76 UGPA (I majored in pre-law studies, double minor in business administration and international studies at a private University in NY).
Top 30% in law school. I'm on a full ride, and I am not disgruntled that I may not get a job b/c I've network tremendously throughout undergrad so I already have offers from diff places. I just hate law school and my future colleagues!
Very low SAT test score
One way to describe myself is a hard worker- I do not mind putting in the hours
I also apologize for the massive spelling errors- I'm typing all this on my BB.
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