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FAIRE: Fairer Access Into Real Experience

Career stories: Lynette Wieland

Perseverance, passion, and persistence fuelled Lynette Wieland鈥檚 route into law.

Lynette鈥檚 an Associate in our health and social care advisory and inquests team and was recently appointed a Law Society social mobility ambassador. But her career journey wasn鈥檛 what many consider conventional.

鈥淕oing to university was an alien concept to me as neither of my parents had attended. I lived and worked in a socially disadvantaged area, and pursuing a career in law was not the usual route.鈥

Following a change in her housing and financial circumstances, Lynette left sixth form without A-levels. Feeling she should prioritise earning a living over her legal ambitions, she instead secured a vocational business apprenticeship. The apprenticeship exposed her to broad experiences 鈥 political, social, and economic insight. It also honed skills in teamwork, leadership, and public speaking.

Lynette decided to take the plunge during her apprenticeship and do a part-time access course in legal methods at Birkbeck, University of London. She later gained an undergraduate degree at the University of York, learning in simulated law firm environments.

Accessing a law career

A successful application to the Law Society鈥檚 Diversity Access Scheme helped fuel her motivation to succeed in pursuing a career in law. The scheme provided both Legal Practice Certificate (LPC) funding and invaluable work experience opportunities.

After her LPC Lynette secured paralegal experience, including in 澳门六合彩资料鈥檚 Health Advisory Litigation department, gaining vital legal skills in time recording, case management, and handling confidential information. Two years later, she secured her training contract through our internal applicant assessment centre.

Coming from an 鈥榰nconventional鈥 background wasn鈥檛 Lynette鈥檚 only challenge. In her second year of university she noticed it took her a long time to read textbooks and academic articles. A visit to the student disability team revealed she had dyslexia and dyscalculia. These diagnoses allowed her to access reasonable adjustments such as assistive technology and printing credits, to access hard copies of articles and textbooks, which were easier to read than online equivalents.

Despite her success, Lynette鈥檚 battled imposter syndrome when encountering students from privileged backgrounds:

It was difficult not to compare. I remember standing outside a career talk delivered by a barristers鈥 chambers and feeling unable to go in as I thought I did not belong there.

鈥淚t was difficult not to compare. I remember standing outside a career talk delivered by a barristers鈥 chambers and feeling unable to go in as I thought I did not belong there.鈥

鈥淚 was often fighting thoughts of whether I was the right fit for a legal career as I鈥檇 not followed a traditional path of A-Levels to university and had joined when considered a 鈥榤ature student.鈥 Fortunately, the strong support network I built helped me through these times.鈥

Advice to others

To others with legal career ambitions, Lynette says:

鈥淎lways apply the three Ps: perseverance, passion, and persistence. Remember that interviewers don鈥檛 know you personally, so you must demonstrate who you are at every opportunity. Interviews only give a snapshot of you, so don鈥檛 take rejection personally. It鈥檚 always worth requesting feedback and taking a constructive lesson from every rejection.鈥

Career stories

Lynette Wallace

Lynette Wallace

Associate

lynette.wieland@brownejacobson.com

+44 (0)115 976 6520