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TCLA Vacation Scheme Applications Discussion Thread 2025-26

Lawlawland

Legendary Member
Premium Member
Oct 4, 2025
198
268
Even for Weil, Macfarlanes, I kept pronounce it incorrectly. Swapped my American Valley & British RP accents lmao
It's Weil and Weiss for me.

I had a 45 minute long one-to-one insightful conversation with someone from Paul, Weiss, only for them to correct that at the end of the conversation with a laughter...

I just wanted to bury myself 10 feet deep and never come up to apply for the firm lmao.
 

FutureTraineeMaybe

Legendary Member
Premium Member
Feb 15, 2024
245
233
For this question - If applicable please state any additional information which you think is relevant to your application or which you think has not been covered adequately in this form.
Can i split the answer between extracurricular activities and my visa conditions. The question they ask about visa conditions in the beginning is "Do you require permission or a visa to work in the office to which you are applying?' with a YES/NO option - with no room to explain. Would it be okay to use this space to tell them I have a visa for the VS but not for the TC?
But I'm not entirely sure if this would be right.
Any advice would be appreciated @Abbie Whitlock
Thank you in advance!!!
 
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badmintonflyinginsect

Legendary Member
Premium Member
Jan 26, 2023
137
113
It's Weil and Weiss for me.

I had a 45 minute long one-to-one insightful conversation with someone from Paul, Weiss, only for them to correct that at the end of the conversation with a laughter...

I just wanted to bury myself 10 feet deep and never come up to apply for the firm lmao.
While got-shul manjeez. Paul wise.
 
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Amgrad

Legendary Member
Oct 2, 2025
248
270
As a German speaker Weil always gets me haha
It's German surname isn't like Weiss too? Idk it's funny when American pronounce them, British would say it similar like German. Loll.. in fact more Americans bear more German than British surnames nowadays, yet they can't pronounce it correctly like supposed to be originally.
 
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Amgrad

Legendary Member
Oct 2, 2025
248
270
The ones that I always struggle with are Perkins Coie and Debevoise. I was under the impression Debevoise had a French pronunciation lmao. The ending actually just rhymes with noise.​
They should've been written on the website or LinkedIn how to pronounce their names. I saw Dechert says "Deck-ert" is written on their website 😅
 
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Abbie Whitlock

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Member
Premium Member
Sep 11, 2025
628
574
Thanks.

How would I approach the other question about a personal experience?
Hi!

I have quoted my original post on this question - if you have any further questions, just shout! :)

Hey! I think the best way to approach these questions is to treat them like mini personal statements. I would keep them personal and tailored to DLA Piper, and reflective of your own experiences when you can.

Here is how I’d break it down:

Personal Experience and Motivation for Law

This question is asking you to go beyond generic motivations (like problem-solving or liking to debate) and focus on something that genuinely developed your interest. This is ideally something that you personally experienced or were actively involved in.

The typical structure I would follow is:
  1. Briefly explain the context - what was the experience, and why was it relevant?
  2. Reflect on what you realised from this experience - did it change your perspective? Did it spark an interest in a distinct area, such as regulation?
  3. Link this to your long-term career ambitions - how did it lead you to pursue a career in law? Why does DLA Piper align with that?

This doesn’t have to be a legal experience! It could be something like helping someone navigate complex systems, a moment that taught you analytical thinking, or a personal situation with a legal element. The main thing is that you have to clearly link it back to your motivation for law!

I know that there aren’t a lot of words available due to the word limit, so you should aim to be as concise as possible. Hope this helps! :)
 
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Abbie Whitlock

Administrator
Staff member
Gold Member
Premium Member
Sep 11, 2025
628
574
For this question - If applicable please state any additional information which you think is relevant to your application or which you think has not been covered adequately in this form.
Can i split the answer between extracurricular activities and my visa conditions. The question they ask about visa conditions in the beginning is "Do you require permission or a visa to work in the office to which you are applying?' with a YES/NO option - with no room to explain. Would it be okay to use this space to tell them I have a visa for the VS but not for the TC?
But I'm not entirely sure if this would be right.
Any advice would be appreciated @Abbie Whitlock
Thank you in advance!!!
Hi!

Yes, you can absolutely use that additional information section to clarify both areas - it's there for anything you feel hasn't been captured anywhere else in the form.

If the visa question only gives a Yes / No response with no space to expand, it's perfectly reasonable to briefly explain your visa situation here (e.g. that you currently hold a visa suitable for a Vacation Scheme but would require sponsorship for a Training Contract). It's usually best to communicate this sort of information, as it provides the graduate recruitment team some context and clarity.

You could structure it as:
  1. Visa clarification: a short sentence or two explaining your current visa status and what it covers
  2. Extracurricular activities or anything else you'd like to highlight: this allows you to show a fuller picture of your experience and interests (although I'd still keep this brief)
As long as it is concise, relevant, and clearly organised, it won't look out of place - that section is designed exactly for details like this!

I hope that assists! :)
 

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