Oilean Beag
Registered User
- Messages
- 221
Believe me , you can actually spin that in the interviews ! Use it to show you were involved in college life etc and would be well able to build contacts :L
Hi Thrifty,
Griffith charge nearly the same fee just for the notes as they do to attend classes. Over € 300 per subject if I recall correctly . The classes really are very good and would be worth going to , if you are planning on shelling out that much for the notes and of course if you live near enough to be able to attend Griffith !
hey, I just came accross this site by pure accident... but it seems like a godsend!!i have just spent forever trawling thru the past messages, consoling myself that I am not alone in this law hell like existence!! I graduated last year with law degree, and have just passed four of my FE1's so am delighted!! but laced with a feeling that my hopes of just getting an apprenticeship were far fetched. I never have applied before and i know that the big firms do all their recruiting in oct time, but do the other firms accept cv's all year round? i know it is probably a fact of life that it will b more or less ignored, but nothin ventured, nothin gained! is it a good idea to just take out the directory and send cv to everywhere, or more to the point, is there a point? pls help and thanks soo much in advance!!!!
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btw, what is the directory???!! R how do you get it?
There's a listing of solicitors on the law society website anyway- not sure if it is as up to date though.
Sorry to hear you have given up Trafford. Maybe a bit of time out and regroup? I had no contacts myself in law when I was looking for an apprenticeship and at the time, in the early 90s, jobs were much more scarce. Eventually I did get one but it involved a good deal of compromise on money. At the time there wasn't a compulsory minimum wage and many of my fellow apprentices were on pittances, supplemented by weekend work and our parents. Maybe the minimum wage is scaring the smaller employers off because frankly most apprentices ( I'm thinking of myself) straight out of a degree/academia take a good deal of training before they are actually useful in an office. I had a great apprenticeship ( apart from the money issue) and a great master and yes, I had no money for three years, but I did qualify in what I wanted to do.
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 ?