TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2021-22 (#1)

Status
Not open for further replies.

Aga123+

Legendary Member
Gold Member
Premium Member
  • Aug 2, 2021
    139
    243
    Do law firms still take candidates if they've resat exams (A-levels, LPC, uni)?

    Similarly, how do exam retakes actually affect your chances at a law firm and are there any tips to help your chances?

    [It would be great to get a graduate recruiter's opinion on this as the information online is quite minimal] @Jessica Booker
     

    psr23

    Esteemed Member
    Premium Member
    Sep 15, 2020
    87
    72
    I have my first partner interview tomorrow (second stage of the AC). Does anyone have any tips for responding to a question they don't know the answer to? This is my biggest worry haha
     

    George Maxwell

    Administrator
    Gold Member
    Premium Member
    Junior Lawyer 50
    Oct 25, 2021
    551
    1,085
    Hi George, I sent you a private message but unsure if you will be able to respond there! i have my interview coming up next week, if you had any key tips/advice for the day that would be amazing! Thank you so much
    Hey @Jellybelly829,

    Apologies for not getting to this before!

    My advice would be, as best you can, to practice the article interview with a friend/family member. The first question your interviewers will ask is "please can you summarise this article for us?" or "what did the article say?".

    A structure for answering this could be:

    1. Short one sentence explanation of subject of the article + conclusion
    2. Succinct identification of three main points covered in the article (outline that you would happily speak about each, or one of these in more depth if required/your interviewers are interested).

    There are also some great resources on the forum with tips about article interviews, such as here and here. I also thought that this post from @James Carrabino might also be useful as he has written out a great list of things to ask yourself when analysing an article for an interview!

    When analysing the interview too, think about the strength of reasoning employed. Do the authors make any logical jumps for example? Are they trying to persuade a particular audience of something? Take a look at the first post linked above for more questions like this.

    The article interview will, however, only take up a small proportion of your interview. Try as best you can to avoid making broad statements during your interview as, if your interviews are anything like mine, your interviewers will pick you up on them (i.e., they will ask you back up what you are saying or try to discuss the subject with you). One way of using this to your advantage would be to inadvertently bring up a subject that you actually are very knowledgeable about. You might then be able to steer the subject of your interview towards a topic you really want to discuss(!).

    The last broad piece of advice I have for you is to think about some classic questions but when you are practicing them, frame them slightly differently. For example, rather than asking, "Why law?", you might be asked, "Why not consulting?". If you have a lot of international experience, they you could be asked, for example, "Why don't you train at Freshfields?".

    Be prepared to be asked (and to justify) the firms that you have applied to alongside Slaughters too. If you give a very narrow range of firms (e.g., Travers, Macfarlanes and Slaughters), they might ask you "Well, the US firms pay a lot more, did you consider training at a US firm?", or suggest that it was a mistake to apply to so few firms. All this goes back to is be prepared to justify your decisions under a very tough line of questioning!

    I hope that helps! Please let me know if you would like anything clarified 🙌
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Nick03 and Jaysen

    TC fiend

    Legendary Member
  • Apr 27, 2021
    191
    429
    Do law firms still take candidates if they've resat exams (A-levels, LPC, uni)?

    Similarly, how do exam retakes actually affect your chances at a law firm and are there any tips to help your chances?

    [It would be great to get a graduate recruiter's opinion on this as the information online is quite minimal] @Jessica Booker
    Not Jessica but I always include my resit on my application even though it’s not visible on my transcript and I’ve found it makes for a really good discussion when talking about failure and resilience. I had to resit my first exam in law school and honestly it was a great lesson that when the worst thing imaginable happens, it won’t kill you and you can come back from it. I still graduated with a first, achieved a merit in my LLM and a commendation in my GDL so ultimately I demonstrated that that was a blip and not indicative of my academic performance. That’s just my thoughts, but I’m sure Jessica will have more valuable insight.
     
    Last edited:

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,531
    20,215
    Do law firms still take candidates if they've resat exams (A-levels, LPC, uni)?

    Similarly, how do exam retakes actually affect your chances at a law firm and are there any tips to help your chances?

    [It would be great to get a graduate recruiter's opinion on this as the information online is quite minimal] @Jessica Booker
    There are a lot of variables here - it will depend on the reasons for the resits, what qualification it is for, what the grade difference is, and if there were any mitigating circumstances.

    For instance, someone resitting their A-levels to increase their grades to get into a particular university with mitigating circumstances will be looked at very differently to someone resitting an LPC module because they just couldn’t pass it on the first attempt.
     

    LS07

    Well-Known Member
    Premium Member
    M&A Bootcamp
    Dec 23, 2020
    24
    58
    @Jessica Booker

    Hi Jessica, I was wondering if you had the answer to this question... Why do offshore law firms have people as counsel working in their offices? I understand offshore law firms are different than onshore law firms but I just thought that counsel was separate to solicitors and therefore were not working within the same organisation? From counsel, I understand barrister. I think I might be misunderstanding something?
     

    Asil Ahmad

    Legendary Member
    Premium Member
    Forum Winner
  • Mar 29, 2020
    1,640
    2,160
    29
    For a paralegal interview about that specific department when researching that department should you find out awards of that department or is it not relevant to a paralegal interview.
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,531
    20,215
    @Jessica Booker

    Hi Jessica, I was wondering if you had the answer to this question... Why do offshore law firms have people as counsel working in their offices? I understand offshore law firms are different than onshore law firms but I just thought that counsel was separate to solicitors and therefore were not working within the same organisation? From counsel, I understand barrister. I think I might be misunderstanding something?
    I can’t be certain on this, but just my thoughts on it…

    Counsel is a term that can be used to explain a variety of roles. For instance, Counsel is widely used for people who are effectively working at Partner level but who do not want to/cannot enter the partnership. They won’t necessarily be barristers - many counsels are only practicing solicitors.

    Therefore the logic might be that they are working as Counsel because the offshore office is not part of the partnership (that might be for tax or legal reasons).
     

    Asil Ahmad

    Legendary Member
    Premium Member
    Forum Winner
  • Mar 29, 2020
    1,640
    2,160
    29
    I can’t be certain on this, but just my thoughts on it…

    Counsel is a term that can be used to explain a variety of roles. For instance, Counsel is widely used for people who are effectively working at Partner level but who do not want to/cannot enter the partnership. They won’t necessarily be barristers - many counsels are only practicing solicitors.

    Therefore the logic might be that they are working as Counsel because the offshore office is not part of the partnership (that might be for tax or legal reasons).
    Also as far as I know in house companies refer to senior lawyers as councels.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: LS07

    LS07

    Well-Known Member
    Premium Member
    M&A Bootcamp
    Dec 23, 2020
    24
    58
    I can’t be certain on this, but just my thoughts on it…

    Counsel is a term that can be used to explain a variety of roles. For instance, Counsel is widely used for people who are effectively working at Partner level but who do not want to/cannot enter the partnership. They won’t necessarily be barristers - many counsels are only practicing solicitors.

    Therefore the logic might be that they are working as Counsel because the offshore office is not part of the partnership (that might be for tax or legal reasons).
    Thank you Jessica, that would make sense as the Counsel at that law firm don't have barrister qualifications, only solicitor.
     

    Rob93

    Legendary Member
    Dec 29, 2020
    627
    1,677
    For a paralegal interview about that specific department when researching that department should you find out awards of that department or is it not relevant to a paralegal interview.
    It doesn't hurt, when I interviewed for my current role I mentioned the specific niches and skills that the team was recognised for in Chambers. I don't think it's strictly necessary to do this, you're not likely to be questioned on it and I wouldn't recommend forcing it into the conversation, but if you can get it out organically it shows that you actually care about the role.
     
    • Love
    Reactions: Asil Ahmad

    Asil Ahmad

    Legendary Member
    Premium Member
    Forum Winner
  • Mar 29, 2020
    1,640
    2,160
    29
    It doesn't hurt, when I interviewed for my current role I mentioned the specific niches and skills that the team was recognised for in Chambers. I don't think it's strictly necessary to do this, you're not likely to be questioned on it and I wouldn't recommend forcing it into the conversation, but if you can get it out organically it shows that you actually care about the role.
    Thank you very much for this this is really helpful.
     

    Palilegal

    Well-Known Member
  • Jan 22, 2022
    22
    58
    When it comes to putting in someone's name (that you know or have a relationship with at the firm) on an application, what is this typically used for by graduate recruitment? Especially when describing their relationship to you?

    Does anyone know the weight/ impact this holds?

    @Jessica Booker
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,531
    20,215
    When it comes to putting in someone's name (that you know or have a relationship with at the firm) on an application, what is this typically used for by graduate recruitment? Especially when describing their relationship to you?

    Does anyone know the weight/ impact this holds?

    @Jessica Booker
    No weight - usually just a way of keeping internal people up to date with the status of your application (if you approve that they can be told). It’s usually just about managing people internally rather than anything to do with your application.
     
    • Like
    Reactions: Rob93

    Lilz

    Esteemed Member
    Dec 16, 2020
    97
    96
    Hi,

    Does anyone know how AC’s are scored?

    is the structure for the scoring system quite rigid? I.e. so many points for each exercise and then they calculate everyone’s score at the end?

    Do you have any idea @Jessica Booker please?

    Thankyou!!!
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    14,531
    20,215
    Hi,

    Does anyone know how AC’s are scored?

    is the structure for the scoring system quite rigid? I.e. so many points for each exercise and then they calculate everyone’s score at the end?

    Do you have any idea @Jessica Booker please?

    Thankyou!!!
    There is no one approach to this unfortunately.

    How it typically works is a scoring system by competencies/strengths, and that each exercise will have multiple competencies/strengths.

    Sometimes there is cross over and competencies will be assessed more than one across exercises in the recruitment process.

    Sometimes you will need to have a minimum score in each competency to pass the assessment centre (that doesn’t necessarily mean you are offered though).

    Sometimes you will need to have a minimum score in each exercise (that doesn’t mean you are offered though).

    Sometimes the highest scoring candidates overall are those who are offered. In other instances, you Just have to meet a minimum benchmark and then other factors are weighed up.
     
    Status
    Not open for further replies.

    About Us

    The Corporate Law Academy (TCLA) was founded in 2018 because we wanted to improve the legal journey. We wanted more transparency and better training. We wanted to form a community of aspiring lawyers who care about becoming the best version of themselves.

    Newsletter

    Discover the most relevant business news, access our law firm analysis, and receive our best advice for aspiring lawyers.