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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol! I don’t think so.
This is the kind of reasoned, logical argument we’ve come to expect from Ivy law grads. I think we can see why they aren’t doing well in the job market.
The ATL rankings have one purpose: to drive traffic to the website. Ivy law grads aren't doing poorly in the job market. Ivies are just filled with rich kids that can chase their conscience and work at Legal Aid straight out of school instead of grinding at the highest-paid job they can find until their loans are more manageable. If someone from Yale is making less than BigLaw market their first year out of school, it is a choice. End of.
I went to a T14 law school but not an Ivy.
Anonymous wrote:The Yale protest thing is being totally overblown here (and by David L.). I talked to friends that are professors there, and they said it was not a big deal like the press is making it seem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lol! I don’t think so.
This is the kind of reasoned, logical argument we’ve come to expect from Ivy law grads. I think we can see why they aren’t doing well in the job market.
Anonymous wrote:Considering the recent idiocy of YLS students, I'm not particularly surprised. Who would want to hire these twits?
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 have yet to know an HYS law grad now teaching at a top law school who also has a PhD. Not one and I know more than a few.
I’m not a lawyer (I have a PhD and am idly clicking through recent topics), but even I know a Harvard law grad/Yale PhD who is a prof at Northwestern in IP law (not sure if Northwestern counts as a top law school though?). The pay was reportedly not big-law amazing, but (from the outside) it appears to be a really sweet gig.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone post the top 10- I do not have an ATL account and do not want to do so and get sucked into its vortex 😊.
Here's top 25.
A win for Catholic law schools -- BC and ND up...ND passes Yale and Harvard. Gotta love it.
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 have yet to know an HYS law grad now teaching at a top law school who also has a PhD. Not one and I know more than a few.
Any of them not retirement age?
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 have yet to know an HYS law grad now teaching at a top law school who also has a PhD. Not one and I know more than a few.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In my experience, both private sector and high-ranking government, for Yale this isn’t a surprise. I don’t know what it is, but for some reason Yale grads seem unequipped for real world law jobs. Harvard/Stanford doesn’t make sense to me.
Well, it does when you take into account David Lat when to Yale - hence Yale’s position just above the cut-off -and he then puts rivals Stanford and Harvard much lower
Davis Lat is no longer associated with ATL.
Meant to add — and he’s been very critical of Yale Law as of late.
Anonymous wrote:This ROI ranking approach is ridiculous. If it applied to DMV schools, only publics would do well (Very little “I” in the ROI) vs. the most expensive privates. And what about the people getting close to full rides at HLS and YLS?