Law in Contemporary Society

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AdmittedStudentSalesDay 6 - 26 Mar 2009 - Main.AndrewCase
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 For the last few days, I have found myself cheerleading for Columbia at various admitted student events. Young recently commented in class that he found himself robotically spouting pro-law school sales pitches to admitted students at the last of these programs, and he had to stop himself from perpetuating “the con.” I don’t know if I’ve just completely guzzled the law school Kool-Aid, but I find myself very happy to be here at this point in my life. It doesn’t FEEL like I’m conning anyone, but Young’s point has been running through my head all day, and one girl mentioned to me this morning that my happiness made her want to come here.

Our discussions on this wiki and in class have made me curious to know whether being happy in law school puts me in the minority, and whether any of us are having internal conflicts when interacting with admits for this admitted students program.

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 Regarding the class not being on the list of ones to attend, I think there are a few other reasons than the one you subtly hint at. The first is that quite frankly, even for many people in the class (myself included), the material is sometimes over our heads. Additionally, we can all agree that this class is not representative of what most classes here are (whether this is a good thing is another topic). Clearly though, the actual content is a bit inflammatory, and could draw reactions; this is likely not something the admissions staff wants to risk. I for one find the class enjoyable and stimulating, but I don't think it warrants criticism of the admitted students program that our class wasn't included. Overall, I feel like perhaps there is a small amount of 'con' by not discussing the relative problems of the school, but in the end this seems harmless compared to the relative merits of the sale.

-- AaronShepard - 26 Mar 2009

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Did others attend Admitted Students Day last year? In my experience the program is strictly tailored to selling students deciding between Columbia and NYU (to the point where the programs are scheduled on subsequent days).

Prof. Moglen today discussed California residents deciding between Columbia and public universities. I don't recall anyone asking or discussing this. Did anyone have this experience? As I remember it was heavily focused on promoting public interest work, to combat the widely held view that NYU is public-interest oriented and Columbia is Wall Street oriented.

I certainly don't remember anyone discussing the relative merits of going to law school at all or not.

Do others want to discuss or share their experiences from last year? For those this year -- what are you telling people to whom you are talking?

-- AndrewCase - 26 Mar 2009

 
 
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Revision 6r6 - 26 Mar 2009 - 20:02:08 - AndrewCase
Revision 5r5 - 26 Mar 2009 - 19:35:20 - AaronShepard
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