Anonymous wrote:I don't think job placement should count double of important clerkships. Count getting a clerkship as employment. Some of those random school jobs are with low paying firms. A clerkship is a low paying prestigious job.
Redo the percentages including that and you'll be back to Yale and Harvard. And no, I did not graduate from either, but I do understand how hard it is to get an important clerkship.
Anonymous wrote:HYS are the only 3 law schools that offer $0 merit aid which means virtually all students graduate with massive debt. That hurts them in these rankings vs schools where the average debt load is significantly less
Anonymous wrote:HYS are the only 3 law schools that offer $0 merit aid which means virtually all students graduate with massive debt. That hurts them in these rankings vs schools where the average debt load is significantly less
Anonymous wrote:Maybe HYS grads are just turning away from soul-crushing stints in Big Law and going on to get PhDs (needed to become a professor at top law schools - most of whom have JDs from HYS) or going in house right away at tech start ups that offered greater deferred compensation. In any event, COVID-times make the job numbers everywhere wonky.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone is figuring out that Ivies and their professional schools are good but no super special compared to other schools in same tier.
Which explains why the non-Ivy suffered the most precipitous fall?
A few years ago one of my interns was headed off to Stanford Law, and when she excitedly explained to me that Stanford Law no longer gave grades or calculated class rankings, I remember thinking “Hmmm.” I had done a lot of recruiting for my BigLaw firm back in the day, and I wondered how that was going to work out.
I think Yale/Harvard/Stanford all have basically a “Honors/pass/fail” system now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe HYS grads are just turning away from soul-crushing stints in Big Law and going on to get PhDs (needed to become a professor at top law schools - most of whom have JDs from HYS) or going in house right away at tech start ups that offered greater deferred compensation. In any event, COVID-times make the job numbers everywhere wonky.
I think that's more like it. A Harvard Law grad will either be much pickier about their jobs, and/or want a career in research or education that does not come with a large salary. I don't think Obama made that much money before becoming President
No. His wife also worked briefly, dipped feet in healthcare and U Chicago’s programs and then stayed home to support his career. They weren’t in it for money but worked out well in the end and they made lots of money after young retirement
Michelle was at Sidley Austin when they met (he was a summer associate) and then went on to a cushy VP job at the UChicago Health Center. She wasn’t exactly working for peanuts. Both of them would have qualified as employed by ATL standards.
The interesting thing is that these schools used to be at the top of the ATL rankings. The methodology has r changed, the schools have. The ATL analysis states that Yale/Harvard/Stanford appear to have chosen a different path. That’s fine, but the argument is often made here that these schools are best for those who want BigLaw jobs. In fact, it’s been argued that your chances at top dollar legal employment is slim if you go to any school below the USNWR top 14. This data shows that this is increasingly not true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Everyone is figuring out that Ivies and their professional schools are good but no super special compared to other schools in same tier.
Which explains why the non-Ivy suffered the most precipitous fall?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe HYS grads are just turning away from soul-crushing stints in Big Law and going on to get PhDs (needed to become a professor at top law schools - most of whom have JDs from HYS) or going in house right away at tech start ups that offered greater deferred compensation. In any event, COVID-times make the job numbers everywhere wonky.
I think that's more like it. A Harvard Law grad will either be much pickier about their jobs, and/or want a career in research or education that does not come with a large salary. I don't think Obama made that much money before becoming President
No. His wife also worked briefly, dipped feet in healthcare and U Chicago’s programs and then stayed home to support his career. They weren’t in it for money but worked out well in the end and they made lots of money after young retirement