Should You Really Be a Lawyer?: The Guide to Smart Career Choices Before, During and After Law School FROM THE PUBLISHER
Walk through any bookstore and check the sections on Reference, Careers or Graduate School. You find all sorts of books that can help you ace the LSAT, get into a good law school, succeed on law school exams, land a legal job, and then manage your career. But none of them can help you answer the most basic question: should you go into law at all? Schneider and Belsky's book is the first to help you decide whether to become a lawyer ... or whether to remain one.
SYNOPSIS
The decision to enter - or remain - in law ranks among the biggest career decisions one will ever make. In fact, it's never been more important to make the right decision, considering the six-figure expense of a law school education. From the latest research on decision-making, authors Deborah Schneider, JD, and journalist Gary Belsky, have created a unique career-building guide for prospective law students, current law students, and practicing lawyers. In addition to nuts-and-bolts advice on law school and the legal profession, their book provides an introduction to the new science of decision-making, a guide to the 12 most common decision-making traps, a series of decision assessment quizzes, a unique Self-Assessment Grid that synthesizes skills, interests and priorities ... and dozens of first-person interviews with prospective law students, current law students, and lawyers, about the decisions they made and why.
WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
Kathy Morris
An inventive and informative book for readers across the spectrum from pre-law to law students to lawyers. Read this book only if you care about your career. JD, author and legal career counselor
Wendy Werner
I wish more of our students and alumni could have read this book before they made their biggest career decisions. former assistant dean St. Louis University School of Law
Elaine Petrossian
This should be required reading for every law school applicant and pre-law advisor, and the self-assessment exercises should be added to the LSATs. assistant dean Villanova University School of Law