Hi there, thought I'd give my two-cents on this.My second-year results came in today, and I was gearing up to apply to law firms come September; however, I received a shockingly bad result that I feel might have brought my law career to an end before it started.
I have extenuating circumstances for this grade as my younger brother was going through mental health issues and I was informed the day before the exam; however, the mark I got was so bad I don't even know if that even matters at all.
Any advice on my next steps and how badly this will impact my future based on the 2:1 requirement will be greatly appreciated.
What sort of firms should I look to and would any accept the 48% I got in this individual module?
Please be brutally honest as well. I need to hear the truth.
My results to date are attached below:
Year 1:
Constitutional and Administrative Law- 68%
Criminal Law- 65%
The Law of Contract- 64%
Legal Foundations- 60%
Overall Year 1: 64%
Year 2:
Equality and Diversity- 72%
The Law of Torts: 65%
European Union Law- 62%
Land Law- 61%
(AFFECTED MODULE) Equity and Trusts- 48%
Overall Year 2: 61%
It is clearly a one off grade and as you mention you have extenuating circumstances to it, providing evidence of that will clearly explain the reason the grade was off.My second-year results came in today, and I was gearing up to apply to law firms come September; however, I received a shockingly bad result that I feel might have brought my law career to an end before it started.
I have extenuating circumstances for this grade as my younger brother was going through mental health issues and I was informed the day before the exam; however, the mark I got was so bad I don't even know if that even matters at all.
Any advice on my next steps and how badly this will impact my future based on the 2:1 requirement will be greatly appreciated.
What sort of firms should I look to and would any accept the 48% I got in this individual module?
Please be brutally honest as well. I need to hear the truth.
My results to date are attached below:
Year 1:
Constitutional and Administrative Law- 68%
Criminal Law- 65%
The Law of Contract- 64%
Legal Foundations- 60%
Overall Year 1: 64%
Year 2:
Equality and Diversity- 72%
The Law of Torts: 65%
European Union Law- 62%
Land Law- 61%
(AFFECTED MODULE) Equity and Trusts- 48%
Overall Year 2: 61%
I graduated with a 59% overall (borderline 2:1 as classified by my uni) and got a TC at a top UK firm so don't lose hope at all. You also have final year to boost your average and that will be easier now you have learnt from mistakes in previous years. Some firms might pick out that grade and question you on it (I've had questions like this from firms such as Stephenson Harwood) but you have valid reasons to back it up. Maybe also focus on an answer of how to improve from this too to show you're making active efforts to improveMy second-year results came in today, and I was gearing up to apply to law firms come September; however, I received a shockingly bad result that I feel might have brought my law career to an end before it started.
I have extenuating circumstances for this grade as my younger brother was going through mental health issues and I was informed the day before the exam; however, the mark I got was so bad I don't even know if that even matters at all.
Any advice on my next steps and how badly this will impact my future based on the 2:1 requirement will be greatly appreciated.
What sort of firms should I look to and would any accept the 48% I got in this individual module?
Please be brutally honest as well. I need to hear the truth.
My results to date are attached below:
Year 1:
Constitutional and Administrative Law- 68%
Criminal Law- 65%
The Law of Contract- 64%
Legal Foundations- 60%
Overall Year 1: 64%
Year 2:
Equality and Diversity- 72%
The Law of Torts: 65%
European Union Law- 62%
Land Law- 61%
(AFFECTED MODULE) Equity and Trusts- 48%
Overall Year 2: 61%
No harm in trying 💪 also your grades are decentMy second-year results came in today, and I was gearing up to apply to law firms come September; however, I received a shockingly bad result that I feel might have brought my law career to an end before it started.
I have extenuating circumstances for this grade as my younger brother was going through mental health issues and I was informed the day before the exam; however, the mark I got was so bad I don't even know if that even matters at all.
Any advice on my next steps and how badly this will impact my future based on the 2:1 requirement will be greatly appreciated.
What sort of firms should I look to and would any accept the 48% I got in this individual module?
Please be brutally honest as well. I need to hear the truth.
My results to date are attached below:
Year 1:
Constitutional and Administrative Law- 68%
Criminal Law- 65%
The Law of Contract- 64%
Legal Foundations- 60%
Overall Year 1: 64%
Year 2:
Equality and Diversity- 72%
The Law of Torts: 65%
European Union Law- 62%
Land Law- 61%
(AFFECTED MODULE) Equity and Trusts- 48%
Overall Year 2: 61%
Hello fellow exeter student, the problem questions on that equity exam were tricky weren't they lol. But in all seriousness I'm sure that you'll be fine. The rest of your other marks are good and you literally have a reason for why Equity went poorly. And in any case, even if some bozo on here tells you that you are doomed and all is done, don't listen to them, keep working hard, send off high quality applications and don't count yourself out
Definitely agree with Jess. Your overall grades are still good.It is clearly a one off grade and as you mention you have extenuating circumstances to it, providing evidence of that will clearly explain the reason the grade was off.
I personally wouldn’t worry about this at all. I don’t think your applications will be unsuccessful based on this alone.
I have seen people succeed with a similar profile grade with no extenuating circumstances, so I am pretty sure you will be okay.
One step you could take is to try and get an academic reference from your university now that may say or insinuate this was an anomalous due to the extenuating circumstances and attach it to applications.