TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2024-25

simplyfaith

Star Member
Feb 13, 2022
44
352
I'm really sorry guys. Linklaters has honestly taken forever to hand out decisions. Could I ask if these were summer/spring vs apps + whether you guys were 66%/77%?

This is like watching a slow-mo of a punch. I'd rather them just hit me quickly, than wait forever for the inevitable.
Spring vacation scheme at 66%

I know, right? $2.7B firm btw
 

BillSikes

Legendary Member
Premium Member
Feb 16, 2024
220
250
I finally got a post-application rejection from Linklaters at 14:48. So much for my 97th percentile Watson-Glaser score 😂

"However, this doesn't have to be the end of the road and we would encourage you to re-apply next year" bro/sis I ain't glazing you again 💅
Now you know how I feel
 

l789

Legendary Member
Aug 19, 2020
166
231
Just to add to this, I think this also extends to things like work experience and extra-curricular activities. Most people who come from lower socioeconomic backgrounds end up needing to part-time or full-time during their time at university (to afford the cost of living), so do not have the luxury or time of securing internships and being part of 20 different clubs and societies. Some people don’t even live on campus and choose to commute to university to lower expenses, so can’t afford to spend time on campus outside of lectures and seminars. 🙂

I wonder whether firms take into account that social mobility and coming from a lower socioeconomic background impacts people far beyond their academics. The kinds of work experience opportunities available to people are limited if they don’t live in a major city. The closest major cities to where I live are around an hour away. For people who come from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, the kinds of work experiences and employment opportunities that are available to them are limited even further. In my local area, there aren’t many employment or work experience opportunities at all. I’m grateful that the university I went to ensured there were opportunities targeting students like myself (e.g., legal professional mentoring schemes and shadowing lawyers). 🙂​
Honestly speaking facts!

These are such critical aspects which I don’t think enough firms or grad rec teams appreciate when assessing candidates. Working part time does limit how much we can take on.

At HSF, grad rec said that if they have two similar candidates they use work experience as a distinguishing factor. I really don’t think that’s fair at all… although I love the firm!

There’s also other aspects of social mobility like being from a lower socio economic background and living in a council flat and having to share a room with your sibilings or extended family members and trying to work and live in overcrowded spaces, I have friends who do not even have a desk in their room to work on.

I don’t think people realise how much material deprivation can affect educational achievement and how this feeds into the training contract process.

I think a lot of firms would benefit from having trainees who have lived experiences of social mobility to advocate for some reform in their recruitment processes than just the standard checklist. Firms have “DEI” experts but I really don’t know how much impact this has.

And to reiterate your point: opportunity is absolutely everything when it comes to this process, how are we meant to build our candidacy if we don’t have any opportunities in place or can take on.

Similarly those who are privately educated are on a higher footing to us from lower socio economic backgrounds because of the opportunities and advantages they had growing up. When I started uni I had nothing to my name compared to my privately educated peers.
 

ashwright

Legendary Member
Gold Member
Premium Member
  • Jul 10, 2023
    182
    332
    Spring vacation scheme at 66%

    I know, right? $2.7B firm btw
    + you were in the 97th perecentile for the WG. Honestly it beats me.
    You're clearly a fantastic candidate. It's absolutely their loss. The right firm will snap you up with no hesitation - just a matter of time.
    All the best 🫶
     

    suhana

    Distinguished Member
    Mar 17, 2024
    59
    30
    Hi @Jessica Booker @Ram Sabaratnam @Andrei Radu

    I have a slight issue. I just got a call for the vac scheme offer for a spring scheme. when i was applying the firm had dates 1-11 april on their website, they still do. but on the call, i was told it will be from 25th march to 11th april. i am an international student and my term at uni ends on the 28th of march. when i applied, i attached all visa documents keeping in mind that i can work legally more than 20 hours during the 1-11 april period. however i cant work from 25th march to 28th since that will be more than 20 hours and will fall in the term time. how do you suggest i proceed? it is my first vac scheme offer so im a bit sceptical if they will rescind it on this basis.
     
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    trainee4u

    Valued Member
    Sep 7, 2023
    106
    232
    Any thoughts on acceptable practices for online tests, from the point of view of academic honesty?

    I did a 'virtual' AC, which I felt was slightly poorly managed. There were two prior rounds: the form, then a proof-reading task using skillsarena, which had video proctoring activated.

    The AC consisted of a group exercise, which makes sense, followed by what turned out to be another written task via skillsarena with video proctoring. It wasn't really clear why this second task was considered part of the AC, because the schedule read:

    1. 11:10-11:40 - written exercise; zoom link provided
    2. 11:40-12:00 - written exercise; zoom link provided

    whereas in fact what happened was they sent out the skillsarena link at 11:02am, and then between about 11:10 and 11:15 were explaining that we'd need to log off zoom (because the skillsarena task is video-proctored), do the task, then rejoin afterwards. Since the allocated time within skillsarena was 30 minutes, it was quite disconcerting as the schedule implied that you were expected to rejoin at 11:40, whereas you probably wouldn't even have started your task until about 11:18, and only at that point would have learned that you had been allocated 30 minutes to complete the task. (As it turned out, when I joined the 11:40-12:00 session, it was just a "thanks for coming", and the entire second hour of the AC could just have been done offline.)

    The fact that video proctoring is activated by skillsarena suggests that they are trying to stop cheating, but they don't define what cheating is.

    One candidate asked "can we use Microsoft Word?" (it was a drafting exercise, and a formatted box was provided to reply within skillsarena)

    In my opinion the answer to this should be "no", unless you've got a dispensation or something, because Word will identify grammar and spelling errors, and now has AI features as well that could generate the entire email.

    However, the answer was given "yes".

    I did not use Microsoft Word, out of an abundance of caution, and also did not use the full 30 minutes because I was concerned about being late back, even though this turned out not to be an issue. I did however ctrl+c my answer and checked it in Word AFTER submission, where it spotted a typo, and suggested a couple of missing commas.

    It turned out that although you could copy out, Skillsarena disabled paste into the box, and two or three candidates were unable to submit because they had done their answers in Word and then copy + pasted them at 29:30, and then found out that it didn't work. So they had to email them manually, lol.

    I've noticed in other online tests that they say they have "behind the scenes metrics". It's not clear what this means, but technologically apps can detect when you switch to other windows, and can also detect copy pasting (although often this is disabled), track response times. In SJTs where they have numerical questions I would tend to use Excel unless it's trivially simple to do by mental arithmetic, because that just seems like the only sensible way to do things, but it's not really clear whether Excel use is somehow frowned upon.

    In addition, AI can accurately answer many types of question, and while this is presumably deemed cheating, it's not necessarily spelled out, nor do they typically make even minimal efforts to stop this (e.g., by using a locked-down exambrowser-type tool). (Although I suppose such efforts might be deemed OTT in that these are not exams but merely one of several stages in a recruitment process).
     

    Jessica Booker

    Legendary Member
    TCLA Moderator
    Gold Member
    Graduate Recruitment
    Premium Member
    Forum Team
    Aug 1, 2019
    15,066
    20,974
    Hi @Jessica Booker @Ram Sabaratnam

    I have a slight issue. I just got a call for the vac scheme offer for a spring scheme. when i was applying the firm had dates 1-11 april on their website, they still do. but on the call, i was told it will be from 25th march to 11th april. i am an international student and my term at uni ends on the 28th of march. when i applied, i attached all visa documents keeping in mind that i can work legally more than 20 hours during the 1-11 april period. however i cant work from 25th march to 28th since that will be more than 20 hours and will fall in the term time. how do you suggest i proceed? it is my first vac scheme offer so im a bit sceptical if they will rescind it on this basis.
    I would speak to the firm to see if it possible to get the first week contracted at 20 hours and only attend 20 hours (just under 3 days) on that first week (eg miss the Friday and leave slightly early one other day that week).

    The firm doesn’t need to rescind the offer though - if it is the case the can’t accommodate 20 hours in the first week, then you cannot meet the terms of the offer, so they don’t have to rescind because the you cant meet the employment contract’s terms.
     
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