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Chase Hasbrouck's avatar

Thanks for the re-post; I appreciate this content being re-shared.

I noticed one drafting error - the text under "Most people shouldn't leave promising work for law school without a clear plan" is currently a copy of other text. I checked the guide on the main site, and it should read:

Most people shouldn't leave promising work for law school without a clear plan

Some people leave a job they enjoy and find valuable to enter law school, perhaps because they believe it is important to have the credential value of a graduate degree. While this move can make sense, make sure you understand how law school will help you achieve your long-term goals before making the leap.

If you think your current work is promising and a good fit, before leaving for law school, make sure you have a clear plan for how law school will help you have even greater impact. Talking with more senior people in the field where you hope to work long-term can be a good way of checking how valuable a law degree is likely to be.

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Hussam's avatar

I feel like Earn to Give wasn’t given a proper evaluation here as an option.

For lots of EA-adjacent people without already elite credentials, Law School seems like the most straightforward path to earning the most amount of money.

I honestly can’t think of a more direct path to $500k+ for say, a philosophy grad from Illinois State University in a dead end role. Law School’s relatively stats-based admissions offers a much easier path to such figures than Entrepreneurship, Finance, or Consulting.

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