How to Become a Lawyer

Quick Facts about Lawyers and Law School

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Which Law School Should You Attend?

Hopefully, by the time you are into your law school applications, you are about to get a bachelor's degree from a respected four-year college or university, with a high GPA, and have scored well on your LSATs. You now have your choice of law schools. Which schools should you apply to?

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Preparing Yourself for Law School

If you want to be admitted into an accredited law school, your preparation should begin well before you apply.

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Making It To the Top at Law School

Next to the school you attend and its tier ranking, the most important determining factor in your job prospects after graduation is your own ranking within your class. This is determined by your grades, and your grades are determined by your exam scores. Here are some tips you can use to buckle down and succeed in your law studies.

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After Law School: What's Next?

To cut to the chase right away, the job market for newly minted law school graduates, in the current economy, is discouraging. As the New York Times found in an article entitled "Is Law School a Losing Game?", many law schools inflate the employment statistics of their graduates by adding any employed graduates to their post-graduation job placement percentage. This means that there is no reliable way to tell how many of those graduates are actually working as lawyers.

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