Hi! If you do not mind me asking, where did you finish law school? Or rather, have you studied in the UK at all? I assume no, but still had to ask. I am an international student based outside of UK and never studied here, so I wanted to understand what are my chances of getting through to an AC with this background.Hi @Amma Usman , could you pls explain how to go about answering the questions: "Why London?", "Why an international law firm?", "Why do you want to work in London?", "Why do you want to do international work?", "Why international law?". Asking this since I am based outside of the UK and will have an in-person AC soon. All these questions sound too similar to me honestly. But I feel that I will def get one of the above since I have no ties to the UK. Confused about which one of these questions wants me to talk about London as a city, the popularity of english law in commercial contracts etc. Thanks a ton.
I have the same background as yours. No ties to the UK. I got my first AC ever quite recently so it’s definitely possible.Hi! If you do not mind me asking, where did you finish law school? Or rather, have you studied in the UK at all? I assume no, but still had to ask. I am an international student based outside of UK and never studied here, so I wanted to understand what are my chances of getting through to an AC with this background.
Thank you! I wish you good luck. Would you mind sharing some advise on you success in securing an AC?I have the same background as yours. No ties to the UK. I got my first AC ever quite recently so it’s definitely possible.
if u have specific questions regarding anything, please dm.Thank you! I wish you good luck. Would you mind sharing some advise on you success in securing an AC?
I think with Slaughter and May you put all your module grades into a seperate application form. If this is the case, you don’t have to list all the modules on your CV.hi @Jessica Booker
i am currently prepping my cv for slaughter and may's TC. I am a post grad so my education section takes up the whole full pages since they ask for every module grade. for my secondary i was educated outside of the uk so the grades for those are written in xxx/xxx format and i have about 11 subjects for A-level (my country's equivalent of them at least) as well as 6 for GSCE. This takes up quite a bit of space and imo is a bit hard to read. ive neatened it as much as possible but the amount of info is still sort of hard to read, is this likely to affect my chances?
The firms website says this in the FAQ bit: "I think with Slaughter and May you put all your module grades into a seperate application form. If this is the case, you don’t have to list all the modules on your CV.
I don’t know if anyone who has applied to the firm can confirm this.
Thank you for clarifying.The firms website says this in the FAQ bit: "
Yes - please include all your academic results on your CV, as well as on your application form.
On your CV, you should list these in chronological order, starting with the most recent. This doesn’t need to take up too much space- you can list them horizontally.
You will also need to include all these results on the online application form that you’ll complete to submit your CV and cover letter. Please make sure that you include all completed module results for undergraduate and postgraduate study – even if they don’t count towards your degree."
i have condensed as much as possible but i have a total of 5 academic entries (two post grads cos it was a dual program, one undergrad, a level equivalent and gcse equivalent). My line spacing is 1 and paragraph spacing is 0. My whole cv is 2 pages exactly so within the limit but the whole first page is basically module results.Thank you for clarifying.
I read this as that you need to put all your overall results on your CV but not a breakdown of the modules, as these will be on the online application form. I could be wrong though.
Normally with changes in formatting, even extensive academic results can usually be presented in no more than half a page of a CV, so I would look at the formatting/line spacing and see if this helps to condense it down if you want to keep it all in.
Feel free to PM me a copy of your CV and I’ll have a quick look over it. I suspect there is an easy way to cut this down. I wouldn’t expect an academic section to take up this amount of space.Oui
i have condensed as much as possible but i have a total of 5 academic entries (two post grads cos it was a dual program, one undergrad, a level equivalent and gcse equivalent). My line spacing is 1 and paragraph spacing is 0. My whole cv is 2 pages exactly so within the limit but the whole first page is basically module results.
My work experience and other fits on the second oage but i had to condense a fair bit.
Since they are such a grade-focused firm, is this normal? Is there anyone who got thru to interview who did the same thing?
When I did my VS at Slaughter, I did hear from a few people who had applied multiple times for the DTC. One woman applied thrice, and got it on her third try.does anybody know if you are allowed to re-apply to Slaughter and May next year if you get rejected post AC for the direct TC?
Thank you, I have just sent it now!Feel free to PM me a copy of your CV and I’ll have a quick look over it. I suspect there is an easy way to cut this down. I wouldn’t expect an academic section to take up this amount of space.
Has anyone heard back from Fried Frank or Arnold & Porter regarding next stage of the direct TC application?
Does anyone know why Reed Smith TC application asks whether we’ve applied to certain other banks/firms/companies?
Just seems a bit weird, am wondering why that is
I guess the best option is always to answer honestly, but I wonder how that will affect my applicationBit weird, like obviously yes, as it is a competitive market. Anyone have advice on how to answer the above?