Saturday, September 5, 2020
Are You Hiring The Law Students Who Will Succeed
Developing the Next Generation of Rainmakers Are You Hiring the Law Students Who Will Succeed? I remember the year our firm offered jobs to two students. The first was about the smartest young student I had ever met in my life. He was a straight A student. I donât think he ever got a B in anything in his life. I was a little concerned about him because he was so smart he rarely attended class. He didnât stay with us very long and it is difficult for me to picture him or remember his name today. The second student was a young man who grew up poor, worked very hard to even get into law school and mostly got Bs. He never missed a class and was like a sponge trying to learn more each day. He stayed with us and worked as hard as a lawyer as he had as a student. I still remember Tyler, and he still asks me questions. I thought of these two law students recently when I spoke to 4th graders on career day at the school where my daughter teaches. The parents of the kids in the school do not have much. They work hard and struggle when things donât go exactly as planned. Many of their kids are like the sponge, anxious to learn every day. In one of the classes I noticed two young girls sitting there taking notes on everything I was telling them. Several years ago, Seth Godin posted a blog On Self Determination. He makes two interesting points. The second of his two points reminded me of the two law students I hired so many years ago. He talks about the A students who took mainstream courses and did the minimum amount of work they needed to do to get an A. They learn for the test. Those students who didnât need to work for their Aâs are joining law firms every day and they are a challenge to supervise. Why you ask? Put simply, they do not see things that are not immediately obvious. They donât dig deeper than the exact assignment. They mess up and do not even understand how they messed up. They also do not take criticism very well. After all, they have been told their entire life how smart they are. Give me the student who should have gotten Câs but worked so hard she got Bâs. She has the emotional intelligence it takes to be successful and she will see things her all Aâs classmate misses. I practiced law for 37 years developing a national construction law practice representing some of the top highway and transportation construction contractors in the US.
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