Home / Current Students / Careers / Bernard Koteen Office of Public Interest Advising / Planning Your Public Interest Career / Career Exploration
Self-Assessment is an important part of the job search process, enabling you to be confident about what it is you are seeking in your career and why it would be a good fit for you. Thinking about the kind of work you are interested in doing, the sort of commitment and connection you want to feel with your work, the best environments for you to feel productive and successful, and the kind of lifestyle needs and trade-offs you are willing to make will focus your search.
Public interest work offers a great deal of variety. Public interest can be practiced in a number of different settings, can involve a wide range of types of work (e.g. trial litigation, appellate work, legislative work, etc.), and can focus on a huge array of issues. Often finding career satisfaction involves finding a mix of all three (setting, type of work and issue area), or two out of the three, that fit your personal needs and interests at the time.
Networking and meeting with OPIA's Attorney Advisors will help you deepen your understanding of those fields that you find most interesting. Successful networking will tell you both the benefits and drawbacks of given positions, and may actually send you in new directions. At this stage, keep an open mind, but continue to ask focused questions about areas that have sparked your interest. In addition to helping you find the right fit, networking may also help you obtain a job. Because the public interest community is so small, especially within particular practice areas, many fairly connected public interest job seekers find leads or work through the "hidden market" created by an intricate network of employers, friends, fellow alumni/ae and professional contacts. Talking with visiting speakers at panels and discussions hosted by the Law School can also be a good way to find out more about specific areas of public interest.