Sunday, January 22, 2012

BullshiTTT

I've posted very little, lately, but this article shook me out of my torpor. Surprisingly, it does not deal with law.

The article, How Much You Study In College Determines What You'll Get Paid For The Rest Of Your Life, cites a 2008 study alleging a strong correlation between studying time and future earnings. It ends with the advice, "It's proof that hard work, not IQ, is what really makes people successful." When you stop laughing, read on.

Speaking as someone who spent every spring break in the library, so as to knock off papers and free time for exams, I call BS. I also learned first-hand about group dynamics: In an eight-member group, three people will do all the work.

After graduating magna cum laude, including good grades in my major, business administration, I then scrambled for permanent, full-time work, finally finding some in July. Following a couple of shit jobs — if you ever work for a small company and see fifteen different initials in the files, it's a shit job — I departed for law school. My college GPA helped smooth the way. College so soured me on the payback for hard work that I didn't focus on my law school grades. Guess how that turned out?

Back in the mid-1990s, I briefly had a small web site for which I wrote an essay called Don't Work for Clowns. It's printed out somewhere and I'll post it when I find it. In the interim, here's some advice that is worth every penny you've paid for it.

  1. Don't work for clowns
  2. Work smart, not hard. Learned this from my high school gym teacher, who was otherwise an asshole, and, in retrospect, it's the best advice I've ever gotten. A memorable ad (WSJ?) expressed it more eloquently: "If you keep your nose to the grindstone, all you'll get is a flat nose"
  3. Who you know is more important than what you know. A corollary for you corporate types is that who you drink with, matters
  4. Network. This doesn't mean cold-calling alumni, though you can try that. It means getting involved and making contacts. In short, you should be constantly, unintentionally networking. It's essential to business and influence but doesn't come naturally to most people
  5. Have wealthy, well-connected parents. You don't? Me, neither. Sucks to be us
  6. Your reward for doing good work is more work
  7. Again, for you corporate types, I was once given the advice to be nice to everyone because you never know who your next boss will be. This came to pass one day, fortunately, with me becoming the boss

I'm writing this from work on a Sunday. FML.

Monday, January 9, 2012

Judge Cabranes tells schools to take their head out of their ass

Calling the presTTTigious law school cartel out has now evolved from scamblogging into a 2nd Circuit judge speaking at a legal educators convention.

There's an interesting National Law Journal article, one of several I've read, on the Association of American Law Schools annual meeting. The conference focused on the sorry state of legal education. Given that the participants were mostly the ones responsible for the sorry state of legal education, albeit with lots of help from Uncle Sugar, the hand-wringing was about as contrived as the grieving at a North Korean dictator's funeral. At the end of the day, they said much and will accomplish about as little as OWS.

Enter Judge Cabranes. Cabranes is the stuff of TLS wet dreams, though they'd probably ban his ass posthaste if he ever showed up there. The judge has three issues with legal education: Cost, student debt, and irrelevant scholarship by the faculty. His proposed solution involves a two-year curriculum of core courses — Space Law is OUT — followed by a third year either apprenticing with practicing attorneys or working, for compensation, in a school clinic. Schools would lose out on the third year of tuition. Sounds promising, but if it stood a snowball's chance in hell of being taken seriously, the judge would find a horse's head in his bed. I have my own thoughts on legal reform that differ markedly from the judge's; however, he has to deal with the schools' output on a daily basis and is in a better position to speak than I am.

The main import from all this isn't that legal education sucks or that people are philosophizing about solutions. Instead, it's the level at which the discussion is occurring. Not too long ago, someone making these comments would have had to post them anonymously and accept being scorned as a bitter loser who didn't network hard enough, and he or she would mostly be preaching to the choir. Now, the comments are coming from the top of the "profession" and being delivered straight to the academy.

C'mon, Congress, it's time for the hammer.

Friday, January 6, 2012

TTThat was the year TTThat was

Happy New Year, all!

The legal industry shed 2,700 jobs during 2011 and spread holiday cheer to about 1,800 people in December. Commenting on the statistics, ABA President and Chief Deck Chair Arranger, William Robinson, told debt-saddled lawyers and their legislators to, "Go f*ck yourself."

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t17.htm

Not seasonally adjustedDecember20101,118,300
October20111,113,200
November20111,114,600
December20111,115,200-3,100
Seasonally adjustedDecember20101,113,700
October20111,112,400
November20111,112,800
December20111,111,000-2,700
Change from November 11-December 11-1,800

Saturday, December 3, 2011

November 2011

Legal hiring grew by 100 jobs in November. Sure, the industry lost 3,100 jobs year over year, but look at the bright side: Without the burst of hiring, it would have lost 3,200 jobs. Get your seat deposit in! Woot!

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t17.htm

Not seasonally adjustedNovember20101,116,400
September20111,108,800
October20111,113,700
November20111,114,500-1,900
Seasonally adjustedNovember20101,116,100
September20111,112,500
October20111,112,900
November20111,113,000-3,100
Change from October 11-November 11100

Sunday, November 27, 2011

OcTTTober 2011

Cripe! How hard is it to write a lousy blog post every so often, especially when it's mostly reformatted data?

Followers of the legal "profession" will be delighted to learn that hiring grew in October, as hundreds of newly-barred TLS posters launched their career in sports and entertainment law. The ABA plans to commemorate this recession turning point by accrediting another two dozen law schools.

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t17.htm

Not seasonally adjustedOctober20101,116,300
August20111,118,200
September20111,109,100
October20111,113,800-2,500
Seasonally adjustedOctober20101,115,900
August20111,113,700
September20111,112,500
October20111,112,900-3,000
Change from September 11-October 11400

Tuesday, November 22, 2011

Be on Tee Vee

From a JDU post:


Volunteer needed for CBS Evening News segment

I'm working with a producer at the CBS Evening News to put together a segment on the employment and debt crisis among recent law school grads. We need someone who:

  1. Is a recent law school grad
  2. Has a large amount of law school debt (at least six figures)
  3. Is either unemployed or seriously underemployed
  4. Is struggling economically as a result
  5. Is articulate, and comfortable with the idea of being on camera

Ideally, this person will have gone to law school for reasons that would resonate sympathetically with a general audience, i.e., not because he or she was confident a law degree was going to make them rich. Also, this person should have relied on misleading employment statistics when deciding to go to law school and to incur large amounts of debt in order to do so. Having a family (spouse, and or child/children) is also a plus. It would be helpful if the person was either fairly close to the New York City area, or in the Denver metro area.

If you would like to participate, please email me ASAP at paul.campos@colorado.edu. Thanks in advance.

Saturday, October 8, 2011

SepTTTember

The legal industry lost about 0.3% year over year. This compares mostly unfavorably with other "professional and business services," particularly since it's the only one that shed jobs in September. Anecdotally, I hear that the number of jobs in Space Law remained unchanged.

http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.t17.htm

Not seasonally adjustedSeptember20101,112,700
July20111,125,000
August20111,118,300
September20111,109,500(3,200)
Seasonally adjustedSeptember20101,115,700
July20111,113,800
August20111,113,500
September20111,112,200(3,500)
Change from August 11-September 11(1,300)