If you bombed your 1L exams, you may feel like your legal career ended before it even began.
Don’t fret. A lot of people who bombed midterms have gone on to success in the legal field. However, that doesn’t mean that you shouldn’t take this chance to think very carefully about your future.
3 Reasons to Stick It Out
Although it’s important to stay optimistic about your future, you should also be realistic. How are your finances? How are your career prospects? Do you have a plan B?
- You’re attending a T14 or other brand name law school. If you think you can make it through the rest of your law school career without failing, consider staying. Yes, the debt is high, but it’s not too much more than other lower ranked schools. Plus, the reputation of the school will probably carry you despite mediocre test scores. It may even help even if you don’t ever practice. Another twist on this is if you are attending a regional law school that is recognized in the local job market and you plan to stay there.
- You have a job waiting through sweet, sweet, connections. Let’s face it. If you have a job waiting for you several years down the line, then there’s a good chance that the firm holding that desk for you has enough influence to ferret you away into a corner without doing too much damage. On the other hand, with the current job market, you may seriously want to consider pursuing some other career path.
- Somebody else is footing the bill and they’re happy to do it. If money isn’t an issue, then stay. Why not?
When to Call It Quits
If you’re in a decent school, you don’t have unrealistic career aspirations, and if you had decent grades in college, you probably should stick it out even if you bombed your midterms.
Related Resources:
- Can You Drop out of Law School? Should You? (Lawyers.com)
- The 10 Most Prominent Law School Dropouts in History (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)
- You Can Fail the Bar Exam and Still Have an Awesome Career (FindLaw’s Greedy Associates)
- Law School Dropout Gets $339,000 Student Loan Discharged (Findlaw’s Greedy Associates)
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