hscsucks2009
New Member
- Joined
- Sep 23, 2009
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Hi guys, just wanted to ask if it was possible to do law without having done legal studies in year 11/12? Will there be a serious disadvantage?
Well what else can you take with law....if you're not good at science?Law is weaksauce
.. unless you combine it with med @ usyd
but then you're gonna graduate at the age of around 60.
and you're gonna have to break the 99.95 ATAR cap.
I disagree.Whilst you may not NEED the knowledge gained in legal studies to excel at law, it's a good way of finding out if you would be SUITED to the study of law. It would be terrible if you got into law only to find out that you hate it. Legal studies gives you a preview of what you are up for prior to fully committing to a life of Latin maxims and musty law reports.
You could say the same thing about tons of subjects though, the way subjects are taught in highschool are usually completely different from the way they are taught at university, at least in my experience.I disagree.
Legal studies is a very poor proxy for learning what it's like to study law. Particularly, the focus on whether particular laws are achieving their stated aims, the fairness or otherwise of laws etc. has little to no relation to applying legal principles, which is what you're gonna be doing in law school and then later as a lawyer.
I'd probably argue that legal studies is more likely to give the wrong impression than to give a taste of a university degree...
To the contrary, those policy type questions are what judges consider when applying the law. Whilst judges might not explicitly ask 'how is x section of the crimes act achieving justice for society and the individual' they take into account policy considerations, such as whether reading a law in a certain way would place onerous restraints on liberty etc.I disagree.
Legal studies is a very poor proxy for learning what it's like to study law. Particularly, the focus on whether particular laws are achieving their stated aims, the fairness or otherwise of laws etc. has little to no relation to applying legal principles, which is what you're gonna be doing in law school and then later as a lawyer.
I'd probably argue that legal studies is more likely to give the wrong impression than to give a taste of a university degree...
Sure - my point is that this small window into the "road ahead" is outweighed by the focus on applying substantive law. Someone with a legal studies background - me, for instance, was easily fooled into believing that a torts problem question required some consideration of the fairness or otherwise of the law, when in actual fact the marker didn't care even a little.To the contrary, those policy type questions are what judges consider when applying the law. Whilst judges might not explicitly ask 'how is x section of the crimes act achieving justice for society and the individual' they take into account policy considerations, such as whether reading a law in a certain way would place onerous restraints on liberty etc.
If you simply view the study of law as applying a legal principle to a hypothetical situation, then yes, legal studies skewers one's perception of what a law degree entails. However, if you take the approach that understanding the law involves appreciating the whole context in which laws are made AND applied, then you would see that legal studies, in some small way, prepares future law students for the road ahead.
It's a bold view considering you haven't studied any of the university courses you're making comparisons with.ethanescence said:Even though content-wise HSC legal studies is completely irrelevant to university law courses, I personally think it would give an individual at least a generalised feel for what the subject entails.