So, I have a question for everyone about what will benefit me more. I was recently accepted into the Fulbright Scholarship program and will get funding to work abroad for a year. The program is extremely competitive to be admitted into, and I'm thrilled at the chance of traveling and working for a full year before going to law school -- especially because I have career interests in international/transnational law.
However, I have no money of my own and my parents will not be paying for law school. I will not be making money during my year abroad, and I will be coming back just a month or so before law school starts and won't have much time to get a job or save any money at all. My undergraduate loans during my year abroad will have to be deferred.
Obviously finances are a major concern for me, and graduating a top law school with minimal debt but with solid job prospects is my ideal situation. But, turning down the Fulbright scholarship because of financial reasons is a hard pill to swallow, especially when considering all the months of work, time, sifting through painful feedback, and interviews I went through in order to get it. I would like to have a better idea of what others are doing, or what other people know in terms of financing law school so I can be pushed in the right direction or set up a game plan for myself, because at this point my joy at being selected for Fulbright is being met with my anxiety about paying for law school.
Any and all advice would be greatly appreciated.
Comments
Sean
Not enough to turn down a Fulbright though - as @Pacifico already alluded to, the kind of job you would likely be getting straight out of undergrad won't make that huge of a dent in law school debt burden - once you factor in taxes, cost of living and so on, I doubt you'd be able to save more than 15-20k. That wouldn't be enough (in my very humble, very personal opinion) to turn down the once in a lifetime opportunity the Fulbright would offer - not just in terms of experiences, but also in terms of making you stand out at OCI's after your first year of law school.
If you haven't been accepted, it would definitely be a strong soft that would help with admissions. I'm not sure what the rest of your application and numbers look like, but I'll go ahead and assume they look pretty good. You have the credentials and work ethic to get a super competitive scholarship, you probably did well in school and with the LSAT. If you're aiming for HYS then the debt burden is yours alone, but you shouldn't have much trouble getting a good job to take care of that debt. If you're aiming anywhere lower, you should be able to "trade" a couple of ranking points for scholarship money (I'm not talking full ride at Arizona Summit vs sticker at Harvard, but rather significant money at Penn vs sticker at Harvard).
Either way, congratulations, and hopefully you enjoy your year abroad!
A girl can dream!
Sorry, I should clarify. I'm not accepted into law school nor have I applied. I have all of my application materials completed (essays, letters of rec, resume updated/formatted, transcripts submitted, fee waivers processed, etc) and am only waiting on sitting for the June LSAT (fingers crossed it all goes well) before I go ahead and apply. I'll be submitting applications this fall.
I'm don't think I'm HYS material! I wish! But I am aiming for top 14, preferably top 7. I was hoping I could get a high enough LSAT score to negotiate scholarships. Haha thank you. I was really unsure about it all until I read all the lovely comments. I'm feeling better, but definitely think I need to do more research so I can relax.
I currently work at an NGO on weekdays and as a barista in a coffee shop on weekends. Between all of that I do LSAT studying. Providing customer service in a food industry builds lots of character. Shitty jobs I can definitely do.
Oh, definitely! I'm very committed to 'top14 or bust' (regardless of how critical people can be of that mindset -- it has its merits)!
I really enjoyed reading your comment! I grew up with a single mom so being money conscious was pretty big in our home. Thank you for the lovely advice!
Sounds to me like you're ready then! Give 'em hell!
Worst case scenario, you get accepted without money somewhere you really want to go to and you defer a year to save up some cash. Best case, you kill June and T14's trip over themselves to accept you with big scholarships.
I'm really rooting for the latter. Hang around and let us know how it all unfolds!
Like Pacifico mentioned, if you forego the Fulbright in order to work and save up, you're not really going to be able to save up a substantial amount of money and as far as boosting admissions chances, you already have work experience under your belt.
If you don't get the LSAT score you want in June, do the Fulbright and then take the following year to work and re-take the LSAT. No matter what though, I strongly advise you to go for the Fulbright; you might not ever get such a chance again. You'll always have the chance to go work lol...
As far as law school debt, there's loan repayment assistance plans at T-14 schools and big law jobs after law school with good salaries. I think you'll be ok