As a law school admissions expert, I often receive questions from undergraduate students who want to know what our secret formula for success is.
Should I join 10+ clubs in college? Should I major in Philosophy to demonstrate logical thinking and writing skills? Should I take that prestigious internship on Capitol Hill? Study abroad to learn a second language?
The right response to all these questions is: What is that you want to do?
As obvious as it may sound, the most important thing you should be doing in college is personal development. Grades and scores matter, but your overall package matters most of all. And there is no better way to become an excellent overall package for law school than to take advantage of your college career to figure out who you are now and who you want to be.
Here are 8 helpful tips on academics, extracurriculars, internship & work experience for those who are thinking about law school early in their college career.
Because law schools, unlike medical schools, don’t require any specific undergraduate courses to qualify for entrance, you have a lot of leeway in your undergraduate studies. Many students think they need to major in Political Science, Philosophy or other supposedly law-related areas, and they are wrong.
Feel free to major, double major, major and two minors (we know how those interests vary) in whatever you are most interested.
Keep in mind, however, that grades do matter for admission. So be careful to challenge yourself while still remaining sensitive to your overall GPA. Should you take “fluff” classes to boost your GPA? Absolutely not. But don’t be completely haphazard in your course selections. Bombing that organic chemistry class three times just because you (the English major) wanted to see if you could figure it out for fun will do you no favors when you are trying to get into law school.
The exception to this advice is for those students who plan to specialize in certain areas as lawyers. Patent lawyers, for example, also possess at least an undergraduate degree in a relevant scientific field if not a graduate degree and study to join the patent bar.
And of course, many others come to law having already practiced in a different field or obtained advanced degrees in another area, and this influences their choices as a lawyer. A JD/MD typically will have a very different path from a JD who majored in Cultural Anthropology.
Remember to begin cultivating relationships with professors now. You will need two academic recommendations for your law school applications, and having a strong relationship with several professors beginning in your first years will be a great boon when it comes time to apply.
If you are the type of person who enjoys playing in the school orchestra, running for student government, playing lacrosse AND trying out for the spring drama production, then by all means, go for it! But if you are a serious musician focused on honing your musical craft to the exclusion of other activities, then that is just as useful for law school admissions.
What schools want to see are: 1) commitment to whatever you’re doing, and 2) achievement of personal growth/development through those activities. So, work on developing your passions, be dedicated to them, and figure out how to make your focus and engagement shine through to the admissions committee.
Leadership – that much-sought-after attribute on school applications–- can mean many things in the context of admissions. You can show that you rose through the ranks of student government over the course of four years. Or that after barely making the women’s rugby team as a freshman, you emerged as co-captain your senior year despite a lack of innate physical prowess.
However you want to demonstrate your leadership to the admissions committee, just remember that schools see right through resume padding. So do what you like, but go deep more than you go broad with your leadership.
One student may have supported herself through school with two part-time jobs during the academic year and more than full-time work during the breaks. Another student may have taken on no paid work but have garnered prestigious internships in the breaks. Both candidates are attractive for different reasons to schools.
So if you have the economic means to take on those interesting unpaid internships, then do it! But if you don’t, work hard, earn the money you need, and know that this too is very attractive to schools.
Whatever you decide to do, don’t sit idle. If you can’t find an internship or opportunity you want, then create one.
Many students seek out paralegal experience before applying to law school. This can be very good experience for deciding whether you want to be a lawyer, but lots (and lots!) of applicants come to law school with this background. It will not provide you with a better chance for admission in and of itself.
Again, take on this work because it is the experience you want, not because it is going to be an advantage in law school admissions.
The classes you take and the experiences you gain in college matter a lot for your personal development. Always choose substance over form and pursue what interests you most.
If you are very, very serious about applying to law school and would like to explore that path from earlier on, seek out activities and work that will give you a sense for what working as a lawyer is like. As you get further into your college career, you will seek out the pre-law advisor at your school and start preparing for the LSAT.
But in your first years, focus on figuring out your own path. That’s what will ultimately shine through in your application.