Is it better to phone firms first to find out if they are taking on trainees or just to send cvs out anyway?
Hi,
My question is slightly off the point here but I would still appreciate any opinion/advice. I am moving to London in Sept to start an LLM. I'm not doing this solely for the purposes of securing a training contract but I am concerned that my subject choice could have an adverse effect on my applications. If I were to take mostly criminal law subjects would I effectively be ruling myself out of competition for a contract in a non criminal firm? Conversely if I don't concentrate heavily on Criminal Law will I still have a chance of a training contract in a criminal firm? From friends, collegues etc I have been told that the bigger criminal firms usually only take apprentices with Masters in Crim.
I thought it was five years from the time you passed your last FE1 ? On my letter from the Law Society I was sure my last entry date was five years from the year I passed the last.
I don't have the letter to hand to check , but it might be worthwhile to have another look at yours.
Have you registered with the trainee register in the Law Society ?
The way they phrased it on my letter (as I checked it again last week) was "5 years from when you first get exemptions". By this they mean from when you pass your initial 3 exams, which in my case was the April sitting 2005.
I have got all my FE1s and the Irish exam and am employed in the Courts Service temporarily. Im going to begin applying for apprenticeships this year. My LLM was in International Human Rights Law and I am not sure whether this will be a turn off for firms looking at my CV. The advice given is generally to stick to what youre interested in and I am interested in human rights and development, however I wouldnt expect it to be a part of my work as a solicitor in Ireland. There arent very many, if any, firms in Ireland that specialise in human rights work. Can anyone give me any advice as to what extent my LLM will be advantageous/disadvantageous to my search for an apprenticeship? Also should I put down any overseas volunteering/travel on my CV or is this irrelevant?
Is it better to phone firms first to find out if they are taking on trainees or just to send cvs out anyway?
thank you to everyone for their help in all this. What is the consensus about cover letters and whether they should be tailored to each firm? I have a list of about 200 firms and, except for the larger ones who have application forms anyway, it is difficult (and time consuming!) to research into what area of law each of them specialise in. It seems most smaller firms do a bit of everything anyway...will I really have to fane an interest in conveyancing or will they see straight though that anyway?!
Ive just heard that I have an interview already. Im thrilled but very unsure as to what to expect. Its a small firm and as far I know they deal with a variety of areas. They said to come in for a chat which sounds rather informal. Should I be preparing answers to dreaded questions such as "why have you chosen law" or just turn up and see what happens? Ive tried researching the firm but no website etc. Has anyone had an interview for a small firm that could offer any advise?
1.
My first question is on the detail required for a good FE1 answer. If I develop answers based on the books, will that not be sufficient?
Or is there some special level of detail or veneer/slant to the answers needed that requires courses such as Griffith's revision course? Why do even law graduates find the FE1 exams difficult?
Hi,
Has anyone reading this actually passed by the FE1’s based just on their own study of the books on the recommended reading list, without aid of a grinds course or law degree?
Also, any opinionis on point “2” in my post of thurdsay september 20th?
Thanks,
Firstly... Planning to do 4 subjects in March/April & 4 in September next year - Are there specific subjects that it would be advisable to tackle together? Any advice on subjects that complement each other or should definitely be addressed first/at the end would be welcome.
Hi,
Has anyone reading this actually passed by the FE1’s based just on their own study of the books on the recommended reading list, without aid of a grinds course or law degree?
Also, any opinionis on point “2” in my post of thurdsay september 20th?
Thanks,
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