Legal education teaches students how to analyze information and make judgments, which are valuable skills not just in the legal field, but in any profession that requires critical thinking and problem-solving. The way lawyers think and process information can be beneficial to other professionals and their managers.

In Scott Turow’s book “One L”, he describes the painstaking process of studying his first case at Harvard Law School as “stirring concrete with his eyelashes”. This shows the level of detail and focus required in legal education. It is not just about memorizing specific cases and statutes, but about learning how to extract rules from patterns, make connections using analogies, predict possible outcomes, embrace ambiguity, and question everything.

Lawyers are often perceived as boring and the subject of jokes, but this reputation is not deserved. In fact, they can be seen as role models for their methodical and meticulous approach to their work. They are trained to think critically and solve complex problems, which makes them valuable assets in any organization or profession.