Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school rankings are a slightly different kettle of fish. The T14 virtually never change, and every law firm knows what those are, so either way, not a huge impact.
From another angle, however, this makes one wonder what Yale feels it needs to hide.
Exactly. I’m no fan of the USNW rankings, but Yale & Harvard were fine with them when they were 1 & 2. Now they’re starting to drop in the rankings, they want to take their ball and go home.
It does make one wonder if the backlash against the recent shenanigans on campus is having an effect on employment prospects for graduates.
You’re the one who should just go home. Yale has been ranked number one forever and there’s no indication that that’s gonna change any time soon.
Yale's score was dropping even though they were still at the top due to "peer rating" because more and more judges were saying they wouldn't accept clerks from there. So they quit. That should help their reputation. They can frame it as DEI but everyone knows why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school rankings are a slightly different kettle of fish. The T14 virtually never change, and every law firm knows what those are, so either way, not a huge impact.
From another angle, however, this makes one wonder what Yale feels it needs to hide.
Exactly. I’m no fan of the USNW rankings, but Yale & Harvard were fine with them when they were 1 & 2. Now they’re starting to drop in the rankings, they want to take their ball and go home.
It does make one wonder if the backlash against the recent shenanigans on campus is having an effect on employment prospects for graduates.
You’re the one who should just go home. Yale has been ranked number one forever and there’s no indication that that’s gonna change any time soon.
Yale's score was dropping even though they were still at the top due to "peer rating" because more and more judges were saying they wouldn't accept clerks from there. So they quit. That should help their reputation. They can frame it as DEI but everyone knows why.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school rankings are a slightly different kettle of fish. The T14 virtually never change, and every law firm knows what those are, so either way, not a huge impact.
From another angle, however, this makes one wonder what Yale feels it needs to hide.
Exactly. I’m no fan of the USNW rankings, but Yale & Harvard were fine with them when they were 1 & 2. Now they’re starting to drop in the rankings, they want to take their ball and go home.
It does make one wonder if the backlash against the recent shenanigans on campus is having an effect on employment prospects for graduates.
You’re the one who should just go home. Yale has been ranked number one forever and there’s no indication that that’s gonna change any time soon.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school rankings are a slightly different kettle of fish. The T14 virtually never change, and every law firm knows what those are, so either way, not a huge impact.
From another angle, however, this makes one wonder what Yale feels it needs to hide.
Exactly. I’m no fan of the USNW rankings, but Yale & Harvard were fine with them when they were 1 & 2. Now they’re starting to drop in the rankings, they want to take their ball and go home.
It does make one wonder if the backlash against the recent shenanigans on campus is having an effect on employment prospects for graduates.
Why would it make one wonder this? They’re two completely disconnected things.
Because it’s clear their concern is about the role of post-Grad employment in the rankings. Yale provides University funded fellowships and they don’t count in the rankings the same as law firm jobs and clerkships. It is interesting that they need to do this when supposedly everyone is beating down their door for YLS graduates.
And Harvard did drop in the rankings last year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school rankings are a slightly different kettle of fish. The T14 virtually never change, and every law firm knows what those are, so either way, not a huge impact.
From another angle, however, this makes one wonder what Yale feels it needs to hide.
Exactly. I’m no fan of the USNW rankings, but Yale & Harvard were fine with them when they were 1 & 2. Now they’re starting to drop in the rankings, they want to take their ball and go home.
It does make one wonder if the backlash against the recent shenanigans on campus is having an effect on employment prospects for graduates.
Why would it make one wonder this? They’re two completely disconnected things.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rankings have no value for the top ten or fifteen law schools anyway. Everyone knows what they are.
After the top 15, things get much trickier. How many people know off the top off their head which law school is better, Minnesota, UNC Chapel Hill, Florida, or Iowa? They're all ranked 21 to 28.
How many people care which is better? And why should they?
If you were going to drop $180-200k on one of them, their rank would reasonably be a consideration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You mean return to the prehistoric days where there were no rankings and kids applied to whatever school they’d heard of? No thanks. I’d rather see schools noticed for their efforts to improve programs. Sure there’s lots of gaming but it’s better than NO information.
95% of kids still end up attending the same colleges in their region, within a couple hours of home.. The rankings frenzy is pointless. It's always been a big racket and needs to go away like the dodo bird. Its out-sized influence is sad and has been nothing but detrimental to admissions and the gaming and fraud that occurs to juke the data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rankings have no value for the top ten or fifteen law schools anyway. Everyone knows what they are.
After the top 15, things get much trickier. How many people know off the top off their head which law school is better, Minnesota, UNC Chapel Hill, Florida, or Iowa? They're all ranked 21 to 28.
How many people care which is better? And why should they?
If you were going to drop $180-200k on one of them, their rank would reasonably be a consideration.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The rankings have no value for the top ten or fifteen law schools anyway. Everyone knows what they are.
After the top 15, things get much trickier. How many people know off the top off their head which law school is better, Minnesota, UNC Chapel Hill, Florida, or Iowa? They're all ranked 21 to 28.
How many people care which is better? And why should they?