Post-graduation

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Revision as of 15:38, 2 April 2007 by Pacman (talk | contribs) (Law)
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Congratulations! Class Day and Commencement are behind you, and you are now alumni. But what do you want to do with the rest of your life? And how do you go about achieving it?

This page is meant to survey some common post-graduation life paths and goals, and tell you how to go about them, if you so choose.

Academia

Long nights in Butler failed to deter you, and you want to stay in the Ivory Tower? You'll need to start applying to MA and PhD programs...

Arts

Longing after the Platonic ideal of bohemia? Starve your way to the top...in the arts!

Business

One of the few fields in which CCE can actually help you out.

Investment banking

See main article: Investment banking

Journalism

It will pay off to have done a lot of hard reporting or editing at Spec, as you won't be able to get the kind of features writing people do at The Blue and White or CPR for awhile. Still, there are growing opportunities online, so experience on websites like The Bwog might be helpful.

Law

Although you can attain some law-related jobs (such as paralegal or congressional aide) with an undergrad degree, in order to rise any higher, you're going to have to go to law school, at some point. Going to law school doesn't necessarily mean becoming a corporate lawyer, although it probably does if you go to Columbia's. Many people have gone to law school and have become politicians, human rights workers, or professors.

Getting in to law school

Contrary to popular belief, you don't need to major in PoliSci to go to law school. English majors, History majors, Engineers - your background doesn't really matter. What does are your grades and your score on the LSATs...the latter moreso than anything else.

Generally, you want to at least get in to a law school in the "Top 14" of the US News rankings, though, because anything less will leave you potentially jobless and scrambling to pay back your expensive loans. Plus, it would drag down Columbia's ranking in the Wall Street Journal rankings of colleges based on their undergrads' admission to elite grad and professional schools. Doing this means scoring high on your LSAT: above 165, at least. The Columbia average, for the record, is 163, which matters, because it's how your grades are evaluated vs. applicants from other schools. Since this is one of the top five average LSAT scores, Columbia grades are looked upon favorably.

But don't count on Columbia Law School favoring you; they only have a dozen or so ex-Columbia undergrads in their class every year.

Medicine

Research

Writing