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must be one of those life time bachelors..santaslayer said:We have a grandaddy at the age of 68...like...omfg...![]()
Some have posted that students in graduate law are stuck in a different class. I'm not sure why because you would still need to complete a similar number of subjects as you would in an undergraduate combined law degree (from my vague understanding).ashjw84 said:Is there any difference between doing an undergraduate law degree compared to a graduate law degree (i mean not masters or phd, just graduate law) ? do employers look at it any different ?
thanks.......
It sucks to be graduating from an Accounting degree now, since all the AASB have changed to international standards from next year onwards. So that's probably a real example to your scenarioaddz said:something else that might play a factor..
is if you are pursuing your first degree (e.g. commerce), after completing a graduate law degree.
doing grad law will mean everything you learnt in the first degree may be slightly outdated (unless you have a part time job or something). this may play a factor in employment...but if some additional training is provided, it may not even be relevant
bahahahahhaghhaAsquithian said:..there is this lady in my crim who has the most annoying laugh in living history... :\ its some kind of lower north shore cuckle/ grand laugh
she always laughs at the wrong moment tooo....at least she doesnt have the post graduate hot air complex
for example...in torts rest assured there will be a post grad asking the teacher whether something is too remote
'what if the person steels the car and then parks it and then someone else steels the car and then hits a pedestrian...is it too remote?'
'What if a dragon came in and set the house on fire...would that be reasonably forseeable?'