<p>No one will care if you graduate in 3 years or 2 years or 10 years. Law school admissions is about GPA and LSAT, not how long it takes to get there. Employers might care but it’s unlikely they’ll care all that much. As for a double major, computer science or electrical engineering make you hot on the IP market these days. Ignore that nonsense about majoring in “government” if you want to practice “constitutional law.” Otherwise, minor in something that will boost your GPA. </p>
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<p>You don’t know what either of these things is. That’s ok, you’re not in law school and not expected to know. But I point it out to make you very wary of trying to intuit what parts of law will interest you or what parts of law you’ll be practicing. Corporate law is an extremely broad category encompassing everything from securities litigation to mergers and acquisitions. Constitutional law is a nifty-sounding practice that essentially no one actually does. Every so often the very best lawyers get a constitutional case or two. Even organizations like the ACLU, that basically exist to uphold the bill of rights, don’t get much play. A good use of any extra time you have would be to intern at a firm or DA/PD’s office. Getting a look at what the practice of law actually entails would probably help you a lot.</p>