Richard Smith
Junior Member
CONNECTICUT- is it possible to become a licensed lawyer by just passing the bar?Meaning without attending any university.( There's no such thing as a stupid question)-<sic>
CONNECTICUT- is it possible to become a licensed lawyer by just passing the bar?Meaning without attending any university.( There's no such thing as a stupid question)-<sic>
While it is possible to go this route, I wouldn't recommend it and few do it. Especially if you want the flexibility to choose any state to practice in. Your options are much more limited for where you can practice if you take a non traditional route to being a lawyer.If you google, "becoming a lawyer without attending law school" you will get some information on those states that allow it and under what conditions they allow it.
I know one person who went through the Virginia Law Reader program. It wasn't particularly easier than just attending law school.While it is possible to go this route, I wouldn't recommend it and few do it. Especially if you want the flexibility to choose any state to practice in. Your options are much more limited for where you can practice if you take a non traditional route to being a lawyer.
That grammatical mess won't get you through school.Thank you for your responses,it's a shame that someone with good retention,and a gift for seeing the approach a prosecutor(s) is leaning towards cannot put ones ability to strategize or apply ones knack to recall even the most obscure precedents,a fluid understanding of the law,it's procedures, syllogistic logic, rhetoric etc. Can't put these to a good use.
Just because you can see where a TV or movie writer is going and have a good memory doesn't qualify you to be a lawyer.Thank you for your responses,it's a shame that someone with good retention,and a gift for seeing the approach a prosecutor(s) is leaning towards cannot put ones ability to strategize or apply ones knack to recall even the most obscure precedents,a fluid understanding of the law,it's procedures, syllogistic logic, rhetoric etc. Can't put these to a good use.
Huh?Its unnerving to conclude through observation that so many students of the law are predisposed to assumption!
Lets instead hypothesize that to succeed in such a demanding field requires a pathological amount of self-confidence.(i wouldn't compare the results of a voice to text response while working on more elevated tasks-
to grammatically dependent test results.)
Nor is it wise to presume armchair litigation,though the assumption brought a laugh to my employer.
I wish i could say more however,anonymity protects both those that can set aside their ego for a skillset that comes effortlessly to myself.