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"Getting out of the business" resource thread

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by playthrough, Aug 2, 2008.

  1. Smartwriter

    Smartwriter Member

    I've got a link to the Bureau of Labor Statistics about paralegals earlier in the thread. I have actually looked at going that route and have considered taking a class for that. From the little bit I know from sitting in an information session for the aforementioned class and with talking with an attorney friend, they do things that include the client intake interview and proof documents. They can work in law firms, governments, corporations. From what I understand, it's more of a doctor-nurse type of relationship. The paralegals don't give law advice. That's left to the attorney. Anyone in the legal field, please correct if I'm wrong on anything. There's also a growing trend toward certifying paralegals. The class I'm considering would be in preparation for a state bar exam.
     
  2. Cadet

    Cadet Guest

    Hmmm... interviewing and proofing documents? Them there's journalism skills!

    I just wonder if there's an inferiority complex involved between "real lawyers" and "just paralegals" ... I wouldn't want some freshly minted frat boy lawyer (like my brother) thinking he could boss me around because he has a J.D., even though I was heavily credentialed in a previous line of work.
     
  3. Just to clarify, I don't think any of us "have the ... money" to go to law school. I know this probably isn't what you meant, but it's not like we're a bunch of trust fund babies going back on mom and dad's dime. It is an investment, one we'll be paying for for years afterward. Others choose to go to a lower ranked school for a significant scholarship. Either way, there are major sacrifices and hardships. I know of one person who just went back who has three young children.

    I'm likely oversensitive, but between the "time and money" comment and the comment about "freshly minted frat boy lawyers," I sensed a little bit of class-type resentment, and I don't think that's fair. And, again, maybe I'm being a bit oversensitive. But I'm making a lot of sacrifices to take this route, and I hate to think that others in a profession I mostly love and am sad to leave would even think that I am some kind of child of privilege.
     
  4. TrooperBari

    TrooperBari Well-Known Member

    I doubt people were disparaging you or the legal business, Waylon.

    All manner of people -- well off and otherwise -- attend law school, and I'm sure the good folks here are aware of that.
     
  5. EStreetJoe

    EStreetJoe Well-Known Member

    Waylon I'm just looking at it from my perspective. My wife's job doesn't offer health insurance. Law school is time consuming to the point where someone won't be able to work a full-time job to support his/her family, let alone get health insurance. Going the COBRA route for health insurance can run $1500 a month for a family plan. So with one salary coming in and a heavy debt for school if one goes the loan route, I see it as a difficult if not impossible thing to do in the short-term. Plus how many years do you need to work to pay off those loans?
    For me, pushing 40 with the first child on the way, I wouldn't have the money (short-term to make mortgage payments, health insurance payments, etc.) or time (short-term to spend time with the baby or long-term to pay off the loans and actually start making money before I hit retirement).
    That's the crux of my time and money comment. To be a paralegal I can go to a graduate-level ABA-approved program for 3 hours a day (figure 6 with commuting time and staying on-campus to do legal research for class assignments), have my weekends and nights free, and have my certification in 5 months, and be able to pay the tuition without taking out a 5-figure loan.
     
  6. BB Bobcat

    BB Bobcat Active Member

    Do paralegals make good money? What do you need to do to to train for that, if not law school? One class? Three classes? One year?
     
  7. EStreetJoe

    EStreetJoe Well-Known Member

    Depends on where you go. Some community colleges offer the certification with an Associate's Degree. Some colleges have a graduate level program for it. You should make sure its ABA-approved.

    The community college near me has an ABA-approved 65-hour course program that will get you the certificate plus an internship (210 work hours) is required. With some classes being offered just in the spring, some just in the fall, and the prerequisite requirements, it could take a year to complete. An ABA-approved graduate-level program that I'm also eyeing requires 300 course hours that can be completed in 5 months with the day program (or 10-months nights and Saturdays) but it doesn't offer an internship.
     
  8. It's all cool. Like I said, I was likely being oversensitive. Everyone has their own reality to face. I just kind of cringe at this idea that only a lucky few can manage to make that sort of leap. I'll be making sacrifices. Major sacrifices. As will my family.

    I was reacting less to you and Cadet than I was to some of the passive-aggressive stuff I've heard from others, in and out of the business. You know, the whole, "Must be nice ..." schtick.
     
  9. EStreetJoe

    EStreetJoe Well-Known Member

    As posted by SmartWriter on the first page of the thread:
    http://www.bls.gov/oco/ocos114.htm
     
  10. The No. 7

    The No. 7 Member

    Hi, I've lurked here for a while and decided to post. I've been a copy editor since graduating from college a few years ago, and I have limited design/Web skills. I want to live in another part of the country more than I want to stay in journalism, but I'm not sure how to market myself. What other jobs can copy editors do?
     
  11. buckweaver

    buckweaver Active Member

    As stated previously, the best way to market yourself is not as a "copy editor" or even someone with "copy editor experience/skills." The skills you use -- the talent and experience you have -- can be applied to any profession you choose. You just have to know how to highlight those skills so that it doesn't look like you're one-dimensional.

    Whatever you want to do is up to you. But you can market your communications skills, your ability to work on deadline and in groups, your initiative, any computer skills you have, etc., for anything you want to apply for. That's how you market yourself.
     
  12. leo1

    leo1 Active Member

    In my year or so as a lawyer and couple of years as a part-time law clerk i have seen paralegals that run the gamut of experience - and therefore run the gamut of salary. here in florida they just launched a certified paralegal program, but it's optional. i've seen paralegals who make about 50K a year who are college graduates. i've seen paralegals who make 25K a year who have nothing but a high school diploma.

    at the large new york law firms i'm sure a paralegal can make close to 100K. most will probably make from 30-60K. what paralegals actually do varies greatly from firm to firm. i've worked at firms where paralegals know more than the lawyers. then i've seen firms where paralegals do grunt work - but they leave at 5:30, while the lawyers have to stay for another couple of hours.
     
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