Tuesday, January 13, 2009

Oh, what a semester it will be!

I just thought I'd list some of the big projects in the works for me this semester for those who care:

1) Jessup International Moot Court. We start oral argument practices tomorrow, and it should be quite an adventure. Our competition is the week of Valentine's Day.

2) Global Business Law Review. Our write-on submissions were due yesterday by 6pm, and I submitted my citation quiz and writing sample just under the wire.  This would be a lot of work, but totally fabulous on the resume, especially next to Jessup. It would also potentially give me great exposure to contemporary issues in international commerce. 

3) Student Bar Association. This is always going in the background; I'm the Speaker of the Senate, which basically means I chair the meetings of our SBA Senate. We're starting up next weekend, and I'm really looking forward to another semester of helping aid the student body. 

4) Internship. Possible internship with the Washington Center this summer. I have already been admitted to the program; now it's just a question of gathering the funding for the tuition and housing. 

5) Legal Intern's License. I am applying for a legal intern's license, which would allow me to do some additional work at work. That seems foolish, you say? But nowhere else will I get such a great opportunity to actually try misdemeanors before a judge in real cases without passing a 3-day long exam. 

6) Scholarships. Tis the season for merit-based scholarships, which means I need to step it up a notch and start applying for as many smaller scholarships as I qualify for.  Last year I won three scholarships, and a significant amount of funding for school! That could really offset summer expenses. 

7) Bar Application. I know, I know; I'm late on this. I have most of it done, and my goal is to get it completed by the end of this semester and totally off my chest. 


Friday, January 9, 2009

This is tasteless, I know...

But really, this is the first and only time I'll do this so explicitly, Internet:

I GOT A 4.0 THIS PAST SEMESTER!!!!

* * * 

I hate to brag. Really. Maybe I'll delete this post later. But I have some things to say about the semester:

I really don't know how it happened. I was terrified; sleepless, actually, right after finals and right before grades came out. 

I was worried my Corporations grade would be too low to exercise my pass/fail option-- you need at least a C to take a 'pass'--which allows the class to be registered as passed, but the grade not to be calculated into your gpa. It protects anyone with a GPA over 2.0, as a C is worth 2.0. As my GPA is over a 3.0, anything short of a B+ will drop it. You only get two pass/fail options over the course of your law school career. I seriously felt HORRIBLE leaving that exam. 

As for property, I felt much more prepared--but it's graded on a standard bell curve with a C being the midpoint, because it's considered a first year course. So even with the most preparation, it was still quite possible that enough other people had done more than I, and edge me out for those rare top spots. 

Further, our school just added minuses. Prior to this summer, we only had A, B+, B, C+, C, D+, D, F.  Now, in their infinite wisdom, they've added A-, B-, C-, D-.  So I'd have expected at least a minus in one of the classes. 

My last course, the externship I did at the US Attorney's office, was a pass/fail based course (which are not counted towards your allowance of 2 pass/fail options) so although it has still not hit the campus intranet, I'm pretty confident that it'll be a pass. 

* * *

I tell you this all for two reasons. Number one: to share my overwhelming disbelief and joy (i.e. bragging). Number two: to illustrate a principle all law students grasp after their first semester. 

YOU HAVE NO IDEA HOW YOU DID ON YOUR EXAMS.

Your impression of how the exam went has absolutely NO correlation to the grade you will recieve, unless you are both a total optimist and also the smartest and most well prepared person in the school--or a pessimist and you haven't opened the text or attended classes. 

You will walk out of an exam feeling like you screwed up everything; you will remember a key principle you forgot to mention; you will wake up at 3 a.m. thinking "Oh Dear God I never even MENTIONED the requirement of notice in equitable servitudes..." and then over a month later, when you've forgotten what was even on the exam, you will stare dumbfounded at an A you can't possibly deserve.  Or, less happily, you will stride out of an exam thinking "that wasn't so bad, I threw everything I knew on there and I'm positive I spotted all the issues..." and months later stare balefully at the leukwarm C that belies your impressions. 

But hey, I'm really not complaining.

...this semester :) 

Monday, January 5, 2009

Happy 2009!

So rather than resolutions, I'm going to list some professional/academic goals for 2009:

1. Make it to the quarterfinals of our Jessup Super Regional Competition at Chicago-Kent.

2. Make the Dean's List every semester.

3. Go to at least one networking event a month.

4. Get my legal intern's license and begin trying misdemeanor cases.

5. Serve as an intern at a government agency or in the field of international law.

6. Write on to the Global Business Law Review.

7. Get as much experience with legal writing as possible.

8. Get signed up for the bar exam.

9. Choose a bar exam prep course.

10. Implement a game plan for studying for the bar in Jan/Feb 2010 (including saving up, etc.)


...any other ideas? I also plan to post at least once every two weeks for my loyal readers.