It’s easy to give general advice about how to make your law school résumé the best it can be. It’s harder to actually do it, right?
Instead of talking generally, I thought it would be helpful to do a résumé teardown for a sample (fictional) law school applicant, so you can see how a humdrum résumé can morph into something pretty impressive!
The Before
Let’s get started. Take a look at Jane Doe’s resume below. It’s not horrible, but it’s basically just a list of all the jobs she’s ever had, with some basic information about her education.
Before we move on, what would you change?





The second critical question your application needs to answer is why this specific law school makes sense for you.
To be convincing, your personal statement must explain why it makes sense for you to go to law school. Duh, right? I mean, of course. But you might find it’s not that easy to really articulate why you want to go to law school. Read on for various approaches.
Last but not least, your application needs to explain why it makes sense for you to go to law school right now. Is there something else you’d be better off doing instead?
Your law school application must answer three questions:
Although not dissimilar from the résumé you’d prepare for a job search, your law school application résumé should highlight the experiences you’ve had that are most relevant to success in law school and the legal profession. Specifically, focus on leadership, public speaking, and your reading, writing, and analytical skills.
When you sit down across from a law firm interviewer, she immediately starts trying to answer two questions:
