Skip to content
Law Society of Scotland
Search
Find a Solicitor
Contact us
About us
Sign in
Search
Find a Solicitor
Contact us
About us
Sign in
  • For members

    • For members

    • CPD & Training

    • Membership and fees

    • Rules and guidance

    • Regulation and compliance

    • Journal

    • Business support

    • Career growth

    • Member benefits

    • Professional support

    • Lawscot Wellbeing

    • Lawscot Sustainability

  • News and events

    • News and events

    • Law Society news

    • Blogs & opinions

    • CPD & Training

    • Events

  • Qualifying and education

    • Qualifying and education

    • Qualifying as a Scottish solicitor

    • Career support and advice

    • Our work with schools

    • Lawscot Foundation

    • Funding your education

    • Social mobility

  • Research and policy

    • Research and policy

    • Research

    • Influencing the law and policy

    • Equality and diversity

    • Our international work

    • Legal Services Review

    • Meet the Policy team

  • For the public

    • For the public

    • What solicitors can do for you

    • Making a complaint

    • Client protection

    • Find a Solicitor

    • Frequently asked questions

    • Your Scottish solicitor

  • About us

    • About us

    • Contact us

    • Who we are

    • Our strategy, reports and plans

    • Help and advice

    • Our standards

    • Work with us

    • Our logo and branding

    • Equality and diversity

  1. Home
  2. For members
  3. Journal Archive
  4. Issues
  5. August 2022
  6. Career break, not a brake

Career break, not a brake

The road from Diploma to traineeship isn’t always short or straight, but using the gap between to pursue other interests can have major benefits, both personally and professionally
15th August 2022 | Sarah Jamieson

It’s safe to say I didn’t take the conventional route from undergrad to traineeship.
I finished my LLB in Scots law with Spanish in 2016 at the University of Dundee and went straight into my Diploma. Like many of my classmates, we knew the Diploma was inevitable and felt it would be best to get stuck in while we were used to studying and lectures!

But another field of activity was also competing for my attention. Towards the end of my final year of undergrad, I was invited to join the Scotland Senior Women’s hockey team.

I had a good first summer with the squad, achieving my first caps for Scotland and taking part in several test series, so I felt it was something I wanted to stick with. There were several big tournaments coming up the year after, so it seemed a good option to get the Diploma done while also concentrating on my training.

I managed to balance my training and the Diploma well enough that I then made the squad for two major tournaments in summer 2017 and went on to secure a spot at the 2018 Commonwealth Games.

Post-Diploma, I filled my spare time when not training by coaching hockey at schools and clubs and by doing the odd bit of legal work experience where I was lucky enough to find it. I knew I needed to stay in touch with this as I didn’t want to lose sight of my legal career completely.  

Pursuing both dreams

I had an incredible couple of years pursuing hockey to the full, but I still had the nagging realisation that my Diploma would soon be running out and that one day I wouldn’t play hockey any more. I maintained my hunt for the elusive traineeship during my entire time out. Having no luck during 2018 – with my Diploma valid for just one more year – I took the opportunity to play abroad in Germany, which was an incredible experience.

On my return to Scotland in summer 2019, after what felt like my 1,000th traineeship application, looking at other legal work opportunities and applying for an extension of my Diploma (note that the guidance on Diploma validity has changed since I was in this position), I finally found my traineeship at TC Young Solicitors in Edinburgh. Preparing for the final interview mid-European Championships was challenging, and it was a surreal moment after applying for so long, but I finally found a firm that valued my unorthodox experience and saw my potential. I then had six weeks to prepare myself for the working world. I was extremely nervous, with very little previous office experience and my Diploma a distant memory at that point. I tried to refresh myself by doing some studying, but all that seemed to do was make me realise how much I used to know but no longer remembered!

However, luckily my firm provided the most welcoming, open and understanding environment in which to learn. It was a perfect balance of having licence to give things a go, while also providing guidance. I think the skills that I gained from my time out only helped me to mature and prepare me for the working environment, and I’ve been lucky enough to continue to balance two careers in the law and on the hockey field.

Out, and back in

If you are considering time out between Diploma and traineeship, then I would suggest going for it! Whatever your traineeship looks like and whichever firm you join, you will be learning from scratch regardless, and you will be surprised how quickly you will adapt if you have the right attitude and the willingness to learn and develop.

A few top tips for getting back into the work environment are:

  • Get to know as many people in the office as possible – you never know whose help you may need one day.
  • Say yes – to post-work events, marketing events, networking, even to helping someone carry something into another room. Make yourself useful and before you know it you will be a part of the furniture.
  • Be patient – you are the least experienced person in the room when you start. Don’t expect yourself to know everything; ask for help and admit when mistakes are made.
  • Remind yourself of what you have gained from your time out – whether this was from travelling/working or further studies, you will have learned something from this. Identify what it is and use it towards your traineeship.

There is no one ideal route to becoming a solicitor. If you have the drive and determination, you will get there in the end. Don’t be scared to look for other opportunities first! 

The Author

Sarah Jamieson is a solicitor with TC Young, and a member of the Scotland hockey squad for the Commonwealth Games just concluded in Birmingham

Share this article
Add To Favorites
https://lawware.co.uk/

Regulars

  • People on the move: August 2022
  • Book reviews: August 2022
  • Reading for pleasure: August 2022

Perspectives

  • Opinion: Mike Blair
  • President's column: August 2022
  • Editorial: Crisis beyond cost?
  • Profile: Ian Forsyth
  • Viewpoints: August 2022

Features

  • The Roeing back of women’s rights?
  • Scotland on the arbitration stage
  • Ending private tenancies post-COVID
  • A pledge against the consumer?
  • Time for fertility rights
  • Getting the most out of mentoring

Briefings

  • Criminal court: Long road against addiction
  • Family: CGT reforms in the pipeline
  • Employment: Long COVID as a disability
  • Human rights: civil rights not engaged by legal aid bid
  • Pensions: A neverending story – fraud update
  • Scottish Solicitors' Discipline Tribunal: August 2022
  • Property: The RoS arrear: any light in the tunnel?
  • In-house: As the workplace evolves

In practice

  • Accredited paralegal roundup
  • Public policy highlights: August 2022
  • Career break, not a brake
  • Business: a nuanced approach
  • Succession planning: the risk factor
  • Tradecraft tips
  • Going green: the easy wins
  • Ask Ash: Unfair comparisons?

Online exclusive

  • Net zero: the strategy and the law
  • Data reform in the UK
  • Criminal injuries compensation: end the conviction rule
  • Too little information?

In this issue

  • Seize your chance for growth
  • The rise of the remote/hybrid law firm
  • Legal software automation – help your team deliver more

Recent Issues

Dec 2023
Nov 2023
Oct 2023
Sept 2023
Search the archive

Additional

Law Society of Scotland
Atria One, 144 Morrison Street
Edinburgh
EH3 8EX
If you’re looking for a solicitor, visit FindaSolicitor.scot
T: +44(0) 131 226 7411
E: lawscot@lawscot.org.uk
About us
  • Contact us
  • Who we are
  • Strategy reports plans
  • Help and advice
  • Our standards
  • Work with us
Useful links
  • Find a Solicitor
  • Sign in
  • CPD & Training
  • Rules and guidance
  • Website terms and conditions
Law Society of Scotland | © 2025
Made by Gecko Agency Limited