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Yeah, I used the French-style accent marks again.
Couldn't help it.
Because part of writing a killer résumé for law school is paying atención to all those tiny details.
Not sayin' "deets" and bein' all casual-like.
In short, I hate résumés. |
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But it doesn't matter whether you like them or not.
You still gotta be good at makin' one.
You still gotta prove you can be the kind of "nitpicky" future lawyer who will get awesome law school grades and pass the Bar Exam on your first shot.
So I put together the best resources I could find --- specifically --- on law school admissions résumés.
I want to help you make the best one possible, with proper formatting and everything.
So click here to get all the law school admissions résumé goodies:
And let me know if you have any questions about résumés, admissions, etc. Happy to help with it all however I can.
-Steve
P.S. My LSAT and admissions courses include a TON of resources on writing the best personal statement possible for yourself.
Recommended Resources:
1. A Comprehensive Guide to the Law School Personal Statement This guide provides tips on conceptualizing, planning, writing, and editing the law school personal statement.
2. Law School Admissions Guide I've written a concise guide to the law school admission process with tips on completing every aspect of your applications from start to finish. It's a small price to pay for a whole lot of guidance, and it's short enough that you'll actually read the whole thing.
3. Law School Admissions Cheat Sheet Quick-reference guide for the law school personal statement, the "Why X?" essay, and the law school résumé. (You can also get it with the LSAT Cheat Sheets.)
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