Strange wrote:These stats and the ones on LST are truly frightening. Example, you have over 40% of Hastings grads who are not confirmed to have full time legal work. Am I interpreting this correctly? Why would anyone want to some of these Tier 1 schools with a 40% chance of failure?
Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100) Forum
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
- Lasers
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
blind hope that you don't end up on the wrong side of that 40%.Strange wrote:These stats and the ones on LST are truly frightening. Example, you have over 40% of Hastings grads who are not confirmed to have full time legal work. Am I interpreting this correctly? Why would anyone want to some of these Tier 1 schools with a 40% chance of failure?
CA schools in this economy are hurting.
- Strange
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
Would also be helpful to know the exact distribution of the people under the final reported salary, for example the "purple bar" for Michigan of those making less than $145k - how many of those are making $40-60K AKA shitlaw jobs
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
This information isn't given out since all that is given are the quartiles and what percentage of the class it applies to.Strange wrote:Would also be helpful to know the exact distribution of the people under the final reported salary, for example the "purple bar" for Michigan of those making less than $145k - how many of those are making $40-60K AKA shitlaw jobs
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- topper10s
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
Did this info come out with last years USN rankings? aka can somebody make a graph like this in the spring for the class of 2010 employment?
- ThreeRivers
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
Wow, amazing...
Also "other firms" can mean anything...
In general should I rank government > "other firms" when it comes to job prospects?
Also "other firms" can mean anything...
In general should I rank government > "other firms" when it comes to job prospects?
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- Aberzombie1892
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
They're each so subjective that I would put them together.ThreeRivers wrote:Wow, amazing...
Also "other firms" can mean anything...
In general should I rank government > "other firms" when it comes to job prospects?
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
Also the USNEWS got rid of the Art. III distinction. Think they did so because so many schools were misreporting it?
- john1990
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
Great graphs, these have always been very helpful. Just wondering, would an attorney practicing Workers Compensation be classified under public interest?
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- jenesaislaw
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Re: Class of 2009 Employment Data in Graphs (Last Update: T100)
The employer type categories (law firm, public interest, government, clerkships, academia, and business) regard only the type of employer, not the kind of work you're doing, either by licensing requirements or substance.john1990 wrote:Great graphs, these have always been very helpful. Just wondering, would an attorney practicing Workers Compensation be classified under public interest?
This means that an attorney practicing workers' compensation can be in any of the categories. Classification only depends on who the person works for.
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