Anonymous wrote:I don't think there's a difference between top 5 and top 10 or 15. Probably top 3 will be H/Y/S but after that it gets fuzzier.
Also the truth is that new lawyers from some top schools will be less prepared to practice law than new lawyers from certain less prestigious schools, so if the firm doesn't want to spend a lot of time training and isn't using where you went as a credential, they might even prefer it if you didn't go the top 3.
That really only potentially applies to Yale, which is very heavy on the more esoteric and less practical aspects of legal education, so much so that some law firms don't want Yale graduates. Beyond that, an employer will take a Harvard or Stanford graduate over a graduate from GW or American, even if the latter has taken more clinical courses.