Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:When I graduated from a top 10 law school in 1986, everyone other than the bottom few had jobs lined up. Most of us in the top half of the class had no trouble getting jobs from big law firms. This was a few years before the ridiculously high 150k starting salaries for associates, but getting a good job was pretty easy.
I now work at a top 10 law school, and the students there face much different circumstances. Most tell me they need to be in at least the top third to feel reasonably confident that they'll have a job upon graduation. The top students are doing very well, but being in the middle of the class is no longer a guarantee of job security. In some ways I do feel that our generation had it easier than the kids of today.
While placement via on-campus recruitment has suffered at the top law schools, it has been eliminated at the lower-ranked schools. There are at least two dozen class actions pending concerning law school marketing and placement-disclosure practices, the ABA is hastily rushing to do the legal-minimum to shape up some of the reporting requirements, and the overwhelming majority of new law school grads have no prospect for law-related employment whatsoever. We all had it easy by comparison.
Suprise, those that majored in idiot degrees aren't getting enjoyment opportunities
Anonymous wrote:When I graduated from a top 10 law school in 1986, everyone other than the bottom few had jobs lined up. Most of us in the top half of the class had no trouble getting jobs from big law firms. This was a few years before the ridiculously high 150k starting salaries for associates, but getting a good job was pretty easy.
I now work at a top 10 law school, and the students there face much different circumstances. Most tell me they need to be in at least the top third to feel reasonably confident that they'll have a job upon graduation. The top students are doing very well, but being in the middle of the class is no longer a guarantee of job security. In some ways I do feel that our generation had it easier than the kids of today.
Yes, those were amazing times. I remember hearing a radio ad for part-time workers at the local school cafeteria. A radio ad! I graduated in the late 70s into stagflation and then survived the dark recession of the early 80s. I always expected the job market to be bad so the 90s were a completely different world for me.Anonymous wrote:1996 grad - MIS degree from Business School. I had a ton of opportunities, and so did all of my friends.
employmentAnonymous wrote:Suprise, those that majored in idiot degrees aren't getting enjoyment opportunities