It really doesn’t matter what you think |
No one is "on here" saying that. Get over yourself. |
DP. whether you like it or not the T14 schools are where law firms recruit from. It's referenced in wikipedia. Go see law school rankings America and scroll down and read about T14. Considering top law schools are now $116 a year (Harvard 2024-25), a student needs to think hard about how to pay off that debt of $348, which where clerking and big law come in. Today, more and more students and their families are looking hard at tge numbers and rankings. You do not want your child to go to an expensive tier 2 law school only to incur huge and not come out if it with a high paying job. |
+1 |
The mommies with kids applying to law school are out in force today. |
Is this a joke, lol? Wikipedia? I don't need to "go see law school rankings America and scroll down and read about T14." I'm an attorney. Y'all are too much. "Read Wikipedia," lol. Too much. |
+1 It is true. |
They want work experience |
If and only if Wash U goves money should she consider this. And you should call financial aid and ask about merit if, after the interview, she wants to attend. Wash U is tied at 16 and desperately wants to make T14. To do that, it must report stellar GPAs and/or LSATs which is where your DD comes in. Law schools will offer big bucks for stellar stats. I know of three law students at GMU/Scalia law and others at schools ranked 30 and 4O who chose those options because they were offered free or half ride (Scalia Law is another working hard to run up the rankings).. But it's a trade off. If you want clerking and biglaw you need to focus on full freight T14s. If you just want the degree then go for the $$ scholarships if offered. I'm not saying this is right, but it is the current system due to USNWR. OP what did your daughter do after graduation? is it something with an "oomph" factor? That can make a difference. And, of course URM and First Gen will help. But, if not, then you are really lookkng at the grades and LSAT to get your DD in. |
lol |
yes, more than 80 percent of Harvard's incoming class have taken off one or two years before applying. Many work as paralegals or get advanced degrees |
Same |
well, to be fair, the 75th percentile at Harvard last year has a 3.99gpa and a 176 LSAT, meaning 25 percent had higher, so, yes, that means waitlist for your DD. It's not "fair" but that's the current system |
You shouldn’t be providing false assurances, it isn’t a law school that top firms will be recruiting from. |
And you don’t know what you’re talking about |