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Full-time Pros
*Full immersion in the classroom & ancillary activities
*Perhaps better scholarships
*Perhaps better connections & experiences
*Perhaps better job prospects
*Perhaps a faster track to the JD (e.g. NU has an accelerated JD)
Full-time Cons
*Little-to-no income (therefore, much reliance on my partner, assuming that he still likes me by then)
*Less time for personal/work/study balance
*Sticker price (aka potential for massive student debt)
*Blow to confidence if I attempt admission with a lower LSAT score (think under 170), even with solid uGPA
Part-time Pros
*Balance life/work/study potentially better
*Continue to work on-call/contractor to help with tuition (to provide an idea, I make roughly $50/hr on-call and $85-100/home visit as a healthcare provider)
*Perhaps feel less rushed in school
*Perhaps easier chance of enrollment with lower LSAT score (think: under 170, including solid uGPA)
*Perhaps easier to make & feed/water a baby, if that's what we want to do (I'm 32 next year. Dude will be 35)
Part-time Cons
*Perhaps less/no scholarships
*Perhaps poor-to-no job prospects
*Perhaps poor connections & experiences
*Perhaps less recognition/respect
*4ish years to get to the JD
Side note on why I'm even considering part-time app/enrollment:
I spent nearly $100k (including scholarships/loans) on my master's from NU in allied health. My bachelor's cost me much less, as I earned an associate's first and then took advantage of transfer scholarships. Mommy & Daddy didn't pay for college, unless you count my birthday & Xmas cash as student loan payback.
Although I currently make six figs, one of the reasons why I'm pursuing law school is that I've concluded that I no longer find my career path fulfilling, for multiple reasons. I've attempted a few times making changes to my path, but I always come to the same conclusion...I'm bored, incredibly unhappy, and miss using my brain in ways that I feel that the legal field will fulfill.
If I can continue to work as a clinician while going to law school part-time, I feel that I may have more stability in reducing income stress & tuition payments, rather than going into more massive debt. However, my biggest fear is that enrolling part-time will absolutely crush career prospects.
These are just my initial thoughts that keep swimming around in my head (tormenting me as I twist my mind around LR). Thoughts, ruminations, and arguments welcome.
Thanks!
Comments
So for me, it's a process of elimination question ;-)
Also, I read somewhere that the ABA doesn't want L1 students to work more than 20 hours per week. However, I'm guessing that the 20 hours restriction is meant for full-time students...?
RE: Scholarships, ehhhh probably not as much. On UH's ABA disclosure, it shows part time students got a whopping 0 in funding. The tuition itself is lower though, at approximately 20k whereas full-time tuition is 29k. I do not believe that this includes private scholarship amounts, which could be used to offset tuition. But the way I see it, as long as I can work 40 hrs a week and make a regular income, I should be able to cushion the blow a lot more than if I had gone full-time.
as far as choosing, everyone is different and in different situations. The way I see it is as an investment. You can limit/halt income for 3 years (minus summers) and be able to totally focus on your grades and doing the absolute best you can putting you in the best position to make the most you can OR you can take it lighter on the schooling, keep working, have those distractions that might take focus away from key classes and such. I don't think I have ever heard a student or past student recommend working 1L... there is generally a reason for stuff like that. While I have no idea how that relates to PT Im sure there will be some sort of downside.
Clearly Im on the side of FT & no work but again, different situations. it is a tough decision but it is a potentially life directing one
For a career in which your first job[s] are often so tied to your grades, I see spreading myself too thin as being unacceptable risk. If that means more debt for 3 years, then so be it. What a pity it would be to swap $20k/year (the amount I'd likely finance just for cost of living) for a lower GPA.
FWIW, I regret working during undergrad. Why did I need to add *anything* to that already heaping plate ???
Won't do that again!
Ugh, in the past week, I experienced a brief few hours of determination that part-time would be the better (more responsible?) option, but then you guys have some really good arguments about the potential negative consequences of spreading too thinly (if only work/personal/school could = 300% in equal efforts!).
I'm thinking now that it might be better for me to try to shut off that debate in my brain until I get my Oct score back...oh, decisions.