Every year, an estimated 10,000 to 15,000 people apply to Canadian law schools, vying for just over 2,000 coveted spots. The competition is even fiercer when applying for a law job. Adam Letourneau, B.Sc., B.A., LL.B., 2005 graduate of the University of Alberta Faculty of Law, former Editor-in-Chief of the Alberta Law Review and owner of Letourneau Law, Barristers & Solicitors, reveals in this 2nd Edition many insider tips on how to gain admittance to law school in Canada, how to cope and succeed in law school, and most importantly, how to land a coveted law job post-graduation. Drawing upon personal experience and the experiences of numerous Canadian law school graduates, Letourneau shares insights on the LSAT, applying for law school, study strategies, summer jobs, the articling application process and much more. Letourneau will save you hours of research, hours of study and tons of stress. Including new law school graduate comments, updated admissions information, what being a lawyer is like, salary updates and more. For more information go to www.canadianlawschool.ca. Part of the Writing on Stone Press Canadian Career Series.
there are two wolves inside of every english major and one of them is going to law school
sorry i know this is objectively sort of an insane thing to log on goodreads lol BUT this was genuinely such a helpful resource!!! if anyone needs more info on law school in the CANADIAN context (and no American information doesn't translate that well), i would highly recommend this book.
Gives a few great tips on getting through law school, but just touches on pre law school and more importantly life after law school. The book primarily explained the path of going through under grad law school and then immediately into a firm, and barely even mentioned those who want to work corporate and/or follow up undergrad with law graduate. In general seemed like a walk through of only the authors one path through law with anecdotes from a few friends. The book needed more authors, and preferably ones with more experience and diverse information on actually living life day to day as a lawyer.
This was a really good book summarizing the entirety of the law school experience. The author seems to cover everything from before you write your LSATs to when you are a practicing lawyer. He does a really good job covering all the different options available to you during law school with regards to articling, summer jobs, and courses. You are left with a really good idea of what to expect if you choose to pursue a law degree and how to go about doing so.
There are so many good links in this book (I wish I bought the digital copy too so I could just click them instead of having to type them in). Definitely a book that should stay close at hand for prospective law students.