RSS
 

Posts Tagged ‘Profs’

Get Out of (Some) Debt Free Card

21 Nov

Two Yale law profs, Akhil Reed Amar and Ian Ayres, are suggesting that law schools offer to pay half of loan debts incurred if students decide to quit law school after receiving their grades at the end of their first semester. This isn’t always the answer if you are struggling with debt, you could contact a professional debt consolidation expert like the ones from CreditAssociates to learn how to get out of debt.

According to a debt consolidation expert, getting out of debt can be tough but it is possible if you are in control. Here are some ways on how you can be debt free:

A way to increase your income:

Not having an immediate job offer is one of the most common reasons of why people struggle to make ends meet. Some people are employed in the private sector and they have good income potential. They can apply for any job that they are interested in.

One way to increase your income is to learn how to make money through online courses or sales. A lot of people find ways to earn extra income as well. I have put together a list of online courses that I suggest you take a look at. Here are some of the courses that you might want to take:

How to Use Mobile Apps to Make Money

How to Use Social Media To Sell More

How To Earn More Income Online

Why Businesses Don’t Like to Pay You to Click on Their Links

What is the Future Of Online Marketing?

More control over your financial affairs:

Many of us want to do more with our money, but are unsure what to do next. Some people turn to borrowing money, while others turn to payday loans. There are many options that you can use to control your money in a different way. There are many different services that you can go and get loans from. You can go through a bank or use an online lending service that allows you to get money instantly. You can also go to a loan company that helps you obtain loans. You can even go on a financial planning course and learn more about your finances and how to manage your money.

The Financial Guide to Start Your Financial Future

Now, this is a book that’s going to give you the best financial advice. It’s going to tell you how to get the best job in the future. It’s going to tell you the best places to live and where to buy the most expensive thing you can afford. All the information you need to be a successful entrepreneur and entrepreneur is on this book, including how to find the right financial advisor to help you make investments and save money and how to make a profit by growing your business.

The only thing that’s missing is how to make money as an entrepreneur.

Let me tell you what I think is missing here.

You can probably guess how I got into entrepreneurship.

It’s because I was a writer. And I had this great idea that I wanted to start my own business. I wanted to run my own business on my own terms and not in the way I had to. That’s how I got into it. But I have been successful since. I’m still in the game. I made a little bit of money off my previous business, but I took a real hit when I couldn’t get my company back on its feet. I tried and tried and tried, but it didn’t work. When I finally decided I had to get back to running my own business, my idea was to go to a small market and try and get this business started. You can’t really grow a business that way. I was still trying to figure out how to do it.

As you mentioned in the video, your business has been successful. What are you doing with the money you made from making the video?

I use it to build a new business. I want to focus my efforts in building a site that’s similar to mine with videos that show you how to use my

 

Advice on Advice Received from Top Law School Profs by Students Trying to Enter the Teaching Market

17 Sep

“A wildly disproportionate percentage of law school faculty graduate from a very few top law schools, especially Harvard and Yale. Not surprisingly, graduates of these schools turn to their mentors and references for advice on how to navigate the teaching…

 

Girls (Strike out that) Law Profs Gone Wild

26 Aug

The once anonymous “LawProf” blogger of Inside the Law School Scam has identified himself. As most readers of LLB know, Mark Giangrande reported that he is Colorado Law prof Paul Campos. I don’t know if the WSJ Law Blog broke…

 

Time to Scramble for Ways and Means to Get Published in Law Journals

19 Aug

While it is fairly obvious that the bench (and bar) don’t read legal scholarship published in law journals, that is not going to stop law profs from churning them out, particularly junior profs scrambling to add publication credits to their…

 

Should Law Profs Who Demonstrate a Lack of Expertise in Providing Real World Legal Advice Be Allowed to Teach Doctrinal Law Classes?

17 Aug

The Practitioner “Exodus” from the Law School Faculty Even the great Christopher Columbus Landell had some experience practicing law before becoming dean of Harvard Law School. But he hired James Barr Ames to joined the HLS faculty. In 1870 on…

 

Location, Location, Location: Feeder Law Schools for BigLaw Associate Hiring and Promotion to Partnership

12 Aug

Two B-school profs, Paul Oyer and Scott Schaefer, have published the results of their study at American BigLaw Lawyers and the Schools that Produce Them: A Profile and Rankings: We profile the lawyers that work at the largest 300 American…

 

As Satisfied and Well Paid Tenured Profs Lounge, Adjuncts Carry the Teaching Load

11 Aug

In Hello, Adjunct, Meet Prof. Cozy: Instructors teaching six courses may earn less than $20,000 a year; they can only dream of tenure’s perks, Frank Gannon writes The reason that academic politics are so bitter, as the quip goes, is…

 

“If you asked me when was the last time I read a law review article, I’d have to think long and hard": Paraphrasing Chief Justice Roberts’ Remarks on the Relevance of the Legal Academy’s Scholarly Output

07 Jul

In his recent Legal Skills Prof Blog post titled Chief Justice Roberts Criticizes Law Profs, Louis J. Sirico, Jr., Professor of Law and Director of Legal Writing at Villanova wrote “[the Chief Justice] politely criticized legal academics for scholarship that…