| Only about 5-10% of students go on to graduate school. Most start work right away. Whether the college name matters or not has nothing to do with graduate programs. |
https://hls.harvard.edu/jdadmissions/apply-to-harvard-law-school/jdapplicants/hls-profile-and-facts/ https://www.lsac.org/sites/default/files/media/lsat-percentiles-2020-2023_accessible.pdf LSAT 25%ile: 171 50%ile: 174 75%ile: 176 GPA 25%ile: 3.84 50%ile: 3.93 75%ile: 3.99 171 LSAT is top 3% 3.8 GPA is is top 75% at Harvard undergrad! https://features.thecrimson.com/2023/senior-survey/academics/ Fun bonus note: "[In 2023] Nearly 20% of respondents who said they had a rounded GPA of 4.0 admitted to having cheated in an academic context, compared to just 10% in 2022. " |
Those 20% of Fortune 500 CEOS that attended a T10 school most likely came from wealthier backgrounds, so the real reason the "succeeded" has to do with their upbringing (they grew up with relatives who are executives and strivers), family money and connections and ability to financially take risks. Those same people were very likely to go on the same path no matter where they attended undergrad. Also those who can afford to attend T10 undergrads are the ones who think "oh, I can afford $400K for law school" The MC/LC student with the same smarts who doesn't think of T10 because it's not affordable is not now thinking "oh, let's spend $400K on law school". They are going to the best state law school they can get into, and possibly living at home with parents while doing this to minimize debt. Doesn't make them any "less smart" Just means they have to worry about finances and that impacts many of their decisions |
So if someone basically says “all students at top grad programs come from top undergrad programs”, you’re saying this info does NOT refute that? Info that shows there are indeed students that came from low ranked undergrad programs? |
| This thread is chock full of copium. |
This is completely untrue in today's hyper-competitive law school admissions landscape Admission to Top 10 law schools is now like admission to Top 10 undergraduate schools. Top GPA and LSAT are just the first hurdle to clear to make it into the pile of applications that are actually considered. And then applicants need that something extra to get them in the door |
|
Here's the data; see for yourself: https://harvard.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats/2223
Of people who had a 3.93/176 or better on lawschoolnumbers, around 20 were admitted, 3 were rejected, and 3 were waitlisted. |
Once more…show me any empirical evidence to support this, not just your made up conjecture. Literally, nothing you wrote above is supported by anything. You pulled it directly out of your a**. |
+1. This |
False. The difference between top private law schools and state programs has become negligible. UVA law is now $105,335 instate and is $108,348 OOS. UCLA law is $98,696 instate and $119,000 OOS. Berkeley Law is $100,000 instate and $112,000 OOS. |
You’re not responding to the correct post. I don’t think anyone cares about the cost of law school in this entire thread. |
[b] False as pertains to Law School, MBA prigrans, med school, most grad programs. Quality of undergrad matters |
Read further up highlighted portion in thread |
It matters for students who do plan for graduate or professional school: the undergrad college name matters the most to this group of students, and they are not rare at top colleges. More than half the graduates from most ivy/plus schools and top LACs go on to grad or professional school, either immediately or after a couple of years, and looking at the rosters of top echelon of MD, MBA, JD, and fully-funded phD programs one will find that T30s/T15LACs undergrads are far overrepresented. I am not speaking of high cost terminal masters that lead nowhere for some mid-level professions, I mean the top degrees. These top-echelon grad/prof schools are over-represented in academic tenure positions, top-hospital MD positions, top research, top industry(jobs that require top-program MBA, phDEngineers). It is not just Big Law that cares about undergrad. For students who are interested in aiming for the top, undergrad very much matters. There are students who want to try for the top: they need to realize that path is much easier from top undergrad programs, because they do not have to be the very top of their school, they just have to be top 1/3 to top 1/2, or even below average depending on the goal and the field. These students would be wise to look at the JD and MD-feeder lists, the phD feeder lists, etc. |
Harvard takes 30% of its class frim Harvard undergrad. It doesn't want you to know that so it posts where only 147 of a class of 569 come from. If you want to go there you go Harvard undergrad or an Ivy or Stanford, U of Chicago, etc. |