Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
A few wingnut judges don’t have that much influence.
Wanting clerks that can think clearly and won't leak info based on their own agenda is hardly "wingnut." Have you met any recent grads? No thanks.
+1. Actually the issue is the intolerance of Yale law students and admin. There is no such thing as free speech there anymore. Only intolerance. And law firms have long avoided Yale law grads because they were trained to be in-the-clouds academics and we’re not good lawyers. Everyone in law knows this.
NP. Here at DCUM when the monthly misleading thread on law school so-called "feeders" is posted, inevitably someone points to Yale law matriculants coming primarily from certain prestigious LACs, moreso than other elite law schools like Harvard. I hadn't made the connection before, between the narrower slice of undergrads represented and the Yale law mindset, but it certainly is food for thought.
The Yale Law mindset? Isn't going to Yale pretty much just about going to the best and most prestigious law school? US law schools are the only grad discipline I can think of where it is basically undisputed which school is the top one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
A few wingnut judges don’t have that much influence.
Wanting clerks that can think clearly and won't leak info based on their own agenda is hardly "wingnut." Have you met any recent grads? No thanks.
+1. Actually the issue is the intolerance of Yale law students and admin. There is no such thing as free speech there anymore. Only intolerance. And law firms have long avoided Yale law grads because they were trained to be in-the-clouds academics and we’re not good lawyers. Everyone in law knows this.
NP. Here at DCUM when the monthly misleading thread on law school so-called "feeders" is posted, inevitably someone points to Yale law matriculants coming primarily from certain prestigious LACs, moreso than other elite law schools like Harvard. I hadn't made the connection before, between the narrower slice of undergrads represented and the Yale law mindset, but it certainly is food for thought.
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.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
A few wingnut judges don’t have that much influence.
Wanting clerks that can think clearly and won't leak info based on their own agenda is hardly "wingnut." Have you met any recent grads? No thanks.
+1. Actually the issue is the intolerance of Yale law students and admin. There is no such thing as free speech there anymore. Only intolerance. And law firms have long avoided Yale law grads because they were trained to be in-the-clouds academics and we’re not good lawyers. Everyone in law knows this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
A few wingnut judges don’t have that much influence.
Wanting clerks that can think clearly and won't leak info based on their own agenda is hardly "wingnut." Have you met any recent grads? No thanks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's just for law school
Who cares
Law schools are only the beginning...
Undergrad administrators at the top schools feel the same way about USNWR.
Especially administrators at colleges that were caught submitting fake data to USNWR