That is a completely ignorant statement. Believe or not a lot of law firms simply need lawyers that can make them money and if you pass the bar from an online college your a hell of a lot more useful than one of the Harvard Grads that didn't pass the bar. Obviously, an online college will not open nearly the same doors, but if you pass the bar at the end of the day you have the same rights in a courtroom that someone from Harvard has. I even worked at a law firm where one of the attorneys graduated from Northwestern California online college and other attorneys in the firm went to Berkley, Hastings, UNC, Santa Clara etc. He had seniority over a lot of people from higher ranked schools, because he was a good lawyer and the name of his school didn't matter.
Quote from: bigs5068 on May 20, 2010, 09:37:55 PMThat is a completely ignorant statement. Believe or not a lot of law firms simply need lawyers that can make them money and if you pass the bar from an online college your a hell of a lot more useful than one of the Harvard Grads that didn't pass the bar. Obviously, an online college will not open nearly the same doors, but if you pass the bar at the end of the day you have the same rights in a courtroom that someone from Harvard has. I even worked at a law firm where one of the attorneys graduated from Northwestern California online college and other attorneys in the firm went to Berkley, Hastings, UNC, Santa Clara etc. He had seniority over a lot of people from higher ranked schools, because he was a good lawyer and the name of his school didn't matter.Him being a good lawyer is not the sole reason why he had seniority, there are other possible factors as well. Let me provide an example for you, a newly grad who has passed the bar from a top 30 law school will be picked over some grad from an online school who has passed the bar. Hardly anyone will apply to a law firm without passing the bar so that example is irrelevant. That lawyer merely got in because the interview obviously went well and they possibly said, "what the hell, let's give him a shot." I bet he is the joke of the office though. Law firms are businesses at the end of the day, not civic duty based firms out for the good of the people. It is not that hard to believe that as long as the person is not going over the firms marginal cost, he/she is good to the company.
After reading about the "philosophy" that most lawschools teach, I bet at least half of harvard and Yale would fail the CA first year bar exam. "but it feel it should be different, let me explain my BS in an essay.....damn multiple choice is racist!"