what does BOS think the next 5 years will be like for law students?
on another forum I came across lawgrads.weebly.com which makes the points:
i've just finished clerkship season with a slew of rejections (for what it's worth, i'm at USyd with a D average and paralegal experience). i think the market has and is changing to the extent that classical beliefs (e.g. get a 99.9, get into a good uni, get good grades and experience, and the jobs will line up for you) will eventually change too. i'd be interested to know how others are approaching the situation; is it the case that we all have to pare down expectations and work in suburban firms or in government? and if so, why does the HECS system continue to apply exorbitant fees on law courses on the basis that law graduates will secure very high salaries? do you believe those parents (such as the south east asian archetype) that put immense pressure on their kids to get into and study law after the HSC understand the facts about the legal profession?
on another forum I came across lawgrads.weebly.com which makes the points:
- australia has 30,000 law students at 36 law schools
- but only 60,000 lawyers and only 12,000 at mid-size firms or above
- 24% of lawyers at top-tiers have left/been sacked since 2008
- firms claim they will continue to downsize and limit graduate intakes
- firms are starting to outsource work to lower-cost asian countries
- companies are freezing/reducing their spending on firms
i've just finished clerkship season with a slew of rejections (for what it's worth, i'm at USyd with a D average and paralegal experience). i think the market has and is changing to the extent that classical beliefs (e.g. get a 99.9, get into a good uni, get good grades and experience, and the jobs will line up for you) will eventually change too. i'd be interested to know how others are approaching the situation; is it the case that we all have to pare down expectations and work in suburban firms or in government? and if so, why does the HECS system continue to apply exorbitant fees on law courses on the basis that law graduates will secure very high salaries? do you believe those parents (such as the south east asian archetype) that put immense pressure on their kids to get into and study law after the HSC understand the facts about the legal profession?