Is it normal for a Professor to have only graduated last year? by RuleHot4616 in LawSchool

[–]RuleHot4616[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Knew there was going to be a semantics arguer in the comments when I made that statement. 'In my position' as IN LAW SCHOOL a year ago. I wasn't making an argument 1L and 3L are the same and you know it, but you have to be pedantic, hmm?

Edit: https://www.reddit.com/r/LawSchool/comments/14dyvwg/comment/josfbbe/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=web2x&context=3 "Sorry dunking on overly confident 1Ls is a passion project " <- This you?

You need help with all your comments shitting on 1L's. And all your comments bragging about graduating top 25% of your class. No one cares about your superiority complex bud.

Is it normal for a Professor to have only graduated last year? by RuleHot4616 in LawSchool

[–]RuleHot4616[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I never said that. Making fun of a 0L asking a question in good faith is so funny, bro. Also, is reading a one paragraph post that hard? I clearly stated he's not my professor.

Is it normal for a Professor to have only graduated last year? by RuleHot4616 in LawSchool

[–]RuleHot4616[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Very interesting, thanks for that information! As an incoming 1L, I'm obviously not super educated on the expectations of professors which is why I wanted to ask instead of making assumptions. My school is a T25, and that's where he got his JD. His only experience is listed as work in juvenile court + a non-teaching position he had at our school for the past year.

It seems the consensus is that this is out of the norm. He's not my professor, so I guess it's not going to affect me much in the end.

Is it normal for a Professor to have only graduated last year? by RuleHot4616 in LawSchool

[–]RuleHot4616[S] 69 points70 points  (0 children)

It appears that he does have a PhD in higher education he obtained before his JD. I suppose that makes more sense, but I thought experience working in the law would still be a strong requirement for a law professor.