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Anonymous posting is only appropriate when you are sharing sensitive information about bar exam prep. You may anonymously respond on topic to these threads. Unacceptable uses include: harassing another user, joking around, testing the feature, or other things that are more appropriate in the lounge.
Failure to follow these rules will get you outed, warned, or banned."
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sat Sep 02, 2017 2:11 pm
Howard?
Hi everyone.
Wondering what the general thoughts are on Howard? I've spoken to a few black lawyers who recommended I apply there because big law firms recruit many students from there annually (more so than some T-14's, and stats support this).
I've also heard awful things about being a minority at many T-14 schools, and law school seems stressful enough without having to worry about racist profs/students.
Would love any and all feedback.
Thanks!
Wondering what the general thoughts are on Howard? I've spoken to a few black lawyers who recommended I apply there because big law firms recruit many students from there annually (more so than some T-14's, and stats support this).
I've also heard awful things about being a minority at many T-14 schools, and law school seems stressful enough without having to worry about racist profs/students.
Would love any and all feedback.
Thanks!
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- Posts: 807
- Joined: Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:32 am
Re: Howard?
What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sat Sep 02, 2017 2:11 pm
Re: Howard?
Thanks for that. What I was told was that big law firms actively recruit from Howard to hire diverse associates, and that they are more likely to top 15% of a class from Howard, than dig into the bottom half of T-14 schools (HSY excluded). I also know many people who've graduated from Howard and are doing very well for themselves. Howard has a lower LSAT median, so of course there are some people who shouldn't be in law school...but I don't think that's to say there is a problem with how the school teaches.sparkytrainer wrote:What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
I've talked to former students who are happy, and current students who love it. I'm obviously hesitant because of the numbers, but I have family that graduated from t-14 schools in the last few years, and watched their struggle.
So yeah.
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- Posts: 807
- Joined: Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:32 am
Re: Howard?
I mean so you have a couple of anecdotes, but I am just pointing out the data. You are MORE likely to graduate from Howard Law and NEVER work as a lawyer than work as a lawyer - in any job.idilbeshir wrote:Thanks for that. What I was told was that big law firms actively recruit from Howard to hire diverse associates, and that they are more likely to top 15% of a class from Howard, than dig into the bottom half of T-14 schools (HSY excluded). I also know many people who've graduated from Howard and are doing very well for themselves. Howard has a lower LSAT median, so of course there are some people who shouldn't be in law school...but I don't think that's to say there is a problem with how the school teaches.sparkytrainer wrote:What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
I've talked to former students who are happy, and current students who love it. I'm obviously hesitant because of the numbers, but I have family that graduated from t-14 schools in the last few years, and watched their struggle.
So yeah.
Further, I know people in the top 5% at Howard and all handful of them struggled to get biglaw, in which only 1 actually did.
It is actually much easier to get biglaw at median from a t13 than get biglaw even at top 15% at Howard.
I'm just letting you know, if you want biglaw, or even more than 50% chance OF EVER BEING A LAWYER, dont go to Howard. The data OVERWHELMINGLY proves this.
- TheBlueDevil
- Posts: 65
- Joined: Mon Jul 31, 2017 7:00 pm
Re: Howard?
Howard definitely does not come close to the T14 in terms of legal hiring. I believe that Yale technically has the lowest big law placement in the T14 (at 38.9%—still almost twice that of Howard), but obviously they're rather special. Setting Yale aside, the lowest in the T13 is Berkeley at 49.7%. And, within the T14, depending on how you define it, you have either Georgetown at 46.2% or Texas at 35.9%. And this doesn't even include highly prestigious and competitive jobs (federal clerkships, certain PI jobs, etc.). Berkeley, for instance, placed 11.8% into federal clerkships (compare with Howard's 1.5%). At the highest end of the T14, there's Columbia with 77.6% of the class entering big law, and another 4.9% entering federal clerkships. Setting placement into high end jobs aside (which, given the statistics, is sensible when talking about Howard), frankly the gap only widens. 21.3% of Howard graduates are totally unemployed, and only two thirds secured long-term, full-time work at all.
There's no getting around it, at US News rank #120, Howard is a TTT. And there's just no comparing TTTs to the T14. However, among TTTs, Howard does punch well above its weight. At #120, Howard is tied with DePaul (6.4% big law placement), Creighton (0.8%), Seattle (4.3%), Montana (0%), and St. Thomas (5.7%). So, when compared to its peers, Howard actually does quite well. Noting that four of the five schools tied with Howard are located in big cities (one in a major legal market), I can only imagine that Howard's unusually strong placement is due to its HBCU status. There are other schools that punch well above their weights too (Fordham, for instance).
So, insofar as you are deciding among TTTs, I think attending Howard is actually a good choice. But between a TTT and a T14—it's really no choice at all.
There's no getting around it, at US News rank #120, Howard is a TTT. And there's just no comparing TTTs to the T14. However, among TTTs, Howard does punch well above its weight. At #120, Howard is tied with DePaul (6.4% big law placement), Creighton (0.8%), Seattle (4.3%), Montana (0%), and St. Thomas (5.7%). So, when compared to its peers, Howard actually does quite well. Noting that four of the five schools tied with Howard are located in big cities (one in a major legal market), I can only imagine that Howard's unusually strong placement is due to its HBCU status. There are other schools that punch well above their weights too (Fordham, for instance).
So, insofar as you are deciding among TTTs, I think attending Howard is actually a good choice. But between a TTT and a T14—it's really no choice at all.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sat Sep 02, 2017 2:11 pm
Re: Howard?
sparkytrainer wrote:I mean so you have a couple of anecdotes, but I am just pointing out the data. You are MORE likely to graduate from Howard law and NEVER work as a lawyer than work as a lawyer - in any job.idilbeshir wrote:Thanks for that. What I was told was that big law firms actively recruit from Howard to hire diverse associates, and that they are more likely to top 15% of a class from Howard, than dig into the bottom half of T-14 schools (HSY excluded). I also know many people who've graduated from Howard and are doing very well for themselves. Howard has a lower LSAT median, so of course there are some people who shouldn't be in law school...but I don't think that's to say there is a problem with how the school teaches.sparkytrainer wrote:What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
I've talked to former students who are happy, and current students who love it. I'm obviously hesitant because of the numbers, but I have family that graduated from t-14 schools in the last few years, and watched their struggle.
So yeah.
Further, I know people in the top 5% at Howard and all handful of them struggled to get biglaw, in which only 1 actually did.
It is actually much easier to get biglaw at median from a t13 than get biglaw even at top 15% at Howard.
I'm just letting you know, if you want biglaw, or even more than 50% chance OF EVER BEING A LAWYER, dont go to Howard. The data OVERWHELMINGLY proves this.
Thank you! Genuinely appreciate it.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sat Sep 02, 2017 2:11 pm
Re: Howard?
Thank you! Appreciate your insight.TheBlueDevil wrote:Howard definitely does not come close to the T14 in terms of legal hiring. I believe that Yale technically has the lowest big law placement in the T14 (at 38.9%—still almost twice that of Howard), but obviously they're rather special. Setting Yale aside, the lowest in the T13 is Berkeley at 49.7%. And, within the T14, depending on how you define it, you have either Georgetown at 46.2% or Texas at 35.9%. And this doesn't even include highly prestigious and competitive jobs (federal clerkships, certain PI jobs, etc.). Berkeley, for instance, placed 11.8% into federal clerkships (compare with Howard's 1.5%). At the highest end of the T14, there's Columbia with 77.6% of the class entering big law, and another 4.9% entering federal clerkships. Setting placement into high end jobs aside (which, given the statistics, is sensible when talking about Howard), frankly the gap only widens. 21.3% of Howard graduates are totally unemployed, and only two thirds secured long-term, full-time work at all.
There's no getting around it, at US News rank #120, Howard is a TTT. And there's just no comparing TTTs to the T14. However, among TTTs, Howard does punch well above its weight. At #120, Howard is tied with DePaul (6.4% big law placement), Creighton (0.8%), Seattle (4.3%), Montana (0%), and St. Thomas (5.7%). So, when compared to its peers, Howard actually does quite well. Noting that four of the five schools tied with Howard are located in big cities (one in a major legal market), I can only imagine that Howard's unusually strong placement is due to its HBCU status. There are other schools that punch well above their weights too (Fordham, for instance).
So, insofar as you are deciding among TTTs, I think attending Howard is actually a good choice. But between a TTT and a T14—it's really no choice at all.
Articles like this one just make it so tempting...https://www.law.com/americanlawyer/almID/1202721057038
But I get it.
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- Posts: 11730
- Joined: Tue Sep 04, 2012 9:53 am
Re: Howard?
A URM at Harvard or Chicago or Michigan or Georgetown, etc. is way more likely to get hired at a big law firm than a URM at Howard. Just think about it.
- Cogburn1984
- Posts: 60
- Joined: Tue Sep 13, 2016 3:00 pm
Re: Howard?
These lawyers wouldn't happen to have gone to Howard, would they? If so, I'd probably be skeptical of anything they say about how great their Alma matter is. I work with a lot of lawyers who swear to me that American is a great school for DC firms.idilbeshir wrote:Hi everyone.
Wondering what the general thoughts are on Howard? I've spoken to a few black lawyers who recommended I apply there because big law firms recruit many students from there annually (more so than some T-14's, and stats support this).
I've also heard awful things about being a minority at many T-14 schools, and law school seems stressful enough without having to worry about racist profs/students.
Would love any and all feedback.
Thanks!
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- Posts: 38
- Joined: Wed Aug 02, 2017 11:41 pm
Re: Howard?
This. Just this.TheBlueDevil wrote:
There's no getting around it, at US News rank #120, Howard is a TTT.
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- Posts: 31195
- Joined: Sat Feb 01, 2014 12:23 pm
Re: Howard?
Your overall point is valid. However, it's dumb to say: unemployed after 9 months = NEVER employedsparkytrainer wrote:I mean so you have a couple of anecdotes, but I am just pointing out the data. You are MORE likely to graduate from Howard law and NEVER work as a lawyer than work as a lawyer - in any job.
I'm just letting you know, if you want biglaw, or even more than 50% chance OF EVER BEING A LAWYER, dont go to Howard. The data OVERWHELMINGLY proves this.
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- Posts: 15
- Joined: Mon Jul 10, 2017 9:18 pm
Re: Howard?
Howard doesn't place well into Big Law, or into any real legal job for that matter. That said, the appeal of Howard is that the ceiling is much higher for the top students there than at other non t-14 schools. At most non t-14 schools, no matter how well you do your post-grad options are geographically limited. Sure you can get a big law gig, but the firm will usually need to be in the same state as your school, and many of the really selective firms won't look your way regardless. At Howard, if you're one of the top students very little is out of reach big-law wise. You can go to pretty much any market, and almost every firm will want you, often badly. While this is great for the students who find themselves in that position, the problem is that you shouldn't ever go to law school banking on being in the top 5% of students. If you have a t-14 offer that won't cripple you with debt, I'd strongly suggest you go with that instead.
- Barack O'Drama
- Posts: 3272
- Joined: Mon Dec 03, 2012 7:21 pm
Re: Howard?
This is basically how someone explained it to me. If you're at the top -- your options are going to be great. For everyone else, who the heck knows, right? The numbers overall look pretty grim with a 46% employment rating on LST.KBJ2011 wrote:Howard doesn't place well into Big Law, or into any real legal job for that matter. That said, the appeal of Howard is that the ceiling is much higher for the top students there than at other non t-14 schools. At most non t-14 schools, no matter how well you do your post-grad options are geographically limited. Sure you can get a big law gig, but the firm will usually need to be in the same state as your school, and many of the really selective firms won't look your way regardless. At Howard, if you're one of the top students very little is out of reach big-law wise. You can go to pretty much any market, and almost every firm will want you, often badly. While this is great for the students who find themselves in that position, the problem is that you shouldn't ever go to law school banking on being in the top 5% of students. If you have a t-14 offer that won't cripple you with debt, I'd strongly suggest you go with that instead.
Last edited by Barack O'Drama on Fri Jan 26, 2018 6:27 pm, edited 3 times in total.
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- Posts: 23
- Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:36 pm
Re: Howard?
False!!!! If you are top 10% at Howard you are guaranteed big law easily. Most people I knew has multiple offers before OCI at T-10.sparkytrainer wrote:I mean so you have a couple of anecdotes, but I am just pointing out the data. You are MORE likely to graduate from Howard law and NEVER work as a lawyer than work as a lawyer - in any job.idilbeshir wrote:Thanks for that. What I was told was that big law firms actively recruit from Howard to hire diverse associates, and that they are more likely to top 15% of a class from Howard, than dig into the bottom half of T-14 schools (HSY excluded). I also know many people who've graduated from Howard and are doing very well for themselves. Howard has a lower LSAT median, so of course there are some people who shouldn't be in law school...but I don't think that's to say there is a problem with how the school teaches.sparkytrainer wrote:What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
I've talked to former students who are happy, and current students who love it. I'm obviously hesitant because of the numbers, but I have family that graduated from t-14 schools in the last few years, and watched their struggle.
So yeah.
Further, I know people in the top 5% at Howard and all handful of them struggled to get biglaw, in which only 1 actually did.
It is actually much easier to get biglaw at median from a t13 than get biglaw even at top 15% at Howard.
I'm just letting you know, if you want biglaw, or even more than 50% chance OF EVER BEING A LAWYER, dont go to Howard. The data OVERWHELMINGLY proves this.
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- Posts: 23
- Joined: Thu Jan 30, 2014 11:36 pm
Re: Howard?
If you get into a T14 no question you should go. But if you're black it really should be T-14 or Howard unless you have a strong state school with at least half the cost at Howard like UGA.
Do well at Howard and big law is easy. Several Howard people are at Cravath etc. and other V10 firms.
Also remember law school is a curve and Howard being HBCU is really interesting in the gamut of academic abilities it attracts. Basically only about 40 people end up being competition. It all comes down to betting on yourself if you can be in the 25% or 30%.
Another thing people overlook is cost. Howard is significantly cheaper, and with a decent scholarship you can not do well and take a job at 50,000 and still be ok.
It's T14 or Howard. Don't make the mistake and go to something like Cardozo, notre dame, George Washington etc. at more than twice the price of Howard and its harder to get biglaw.
Do well at Howard and big law is easy. Several Howard people are at Cravath etc. and other V10 firms.
Also remember law school is a curve and Howard being HBCU is really interesting in the gamut of academic abilities it attracts. Basically only about 40 people end up being competition. It all comes down to betting on yourself if you can be in the 25% or 30%.
Another thing people overlook is cost. Howard is significantly cheaper, and with a decent scholarship you can not do well and take a job at 50,000 and still be ok.
It's T14 or Howard. Don't make the mistake and go to something like Cardozo, notre dame, George Washington etc. at more than twice the price of Howard and its harder to get biglaw.
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- Posts: 807
- Joined: Sat Jan 17, 2015 12:32 am
Re: Howard?
This is categorically untrue. I know MULTIPLE top 10% people at Howard who completely struck out from biglaw.futuresuccessstory wrote:False!!!! If you are top 10% at Howard you are guaranteed big law easily. Most people I knew has multiple offers before OCI at T-10.sparkytrainer wrote:I mean so you have a couple of anecdotes, but I am just pointing out the data. You are MORE likely to graduate from Howard law and NEVER work as a lawyer than work as a lawyer - in any job.idilbeshir wrote:Thanks for that. What I was told was that big law firms actively recruit from Howard to hire diverse associates, and that they are more likely to top 15% of a class from Howard, than dig into the bottom half of T-14 schools (HSY excluded). I also know many people who've graduated from Howard and are doing very well for themselves. Howard has a lower LSAT median, so of course there are some people who shouldn't be in law school...but I don't think that's to say there is a problem with how the school teaches.sparkytrainer wrote:What do you mean they do really well with biglaw?
That objectively is false.
See https://www.lstreports.com/schools/howard/jobs/
Less than 50% of Howard grads are getting long-term, legal jobs. You have more than a coins flip chance at never working in law at all, let alone big law. Less than 20% of the class even sniffs biglaw, very generously defined.
At the t13, you have a better change of getting biglaw 60% from Cornell to 85% chance at Columbia and Duke. How is 85% chance of biglaw specifically at a t13 in any way comparable to a law school who doesn't have HALF THE CLASS EVER GET A LEGAL JOB?
So yeah.
Edit: and at my t13, I have not heard of a single case of a racist professor or student or any racist incident involving the law school. The URM community at mine is fantastic and I am glad I came here.
I've talked to former students who are happy, and current students who love it. I'm obviously hesitant because of the numbers, but I have family that graduated from t-14 schools in the last few years, and watched their struggle.
So yeah.
Further, I know people in the top 5% at Howard and all handful of them struggled to get biglaw, in which only 1 actually did.
It is actually much easier to get biglaw at median from a t13 than get biglaw even at top 15% at Howard.
I'm just letting you know, if you want biglaw, or even more than 50% chance OF EVER BEING A LAWYER, dont go to Howard. The data OVERWHELMINGLY proves this.
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- Posts: 87
- Joined: Fri Oct 11, 2013 6:00 am
Re: Howard?
Honest question, why do you say this? I got into Howard last year, and post-poned, but plan to reapply this year, and hopefully will get in again..futuresuccessstory wrote:If you get into a T14 no question you should go. But if you're black it really should be T-14 or Howard unless you have a strong state school with at least half the cost at Howard like UGA.
Do well at Howard and big law is easy. Several Howard people are at Cravath etc. and other V10 firms.
Also remember law school is a curve and Howard being HBCU is really interesting in the gamut of academic abilities it attracts. Basically only about 40 people end up being competition. It all comes down to betting on yourself if you can be in the 25% or 30%.
Another thing people overlook is cost. Howard is significantly cheaper, and with a decent scholarship you can not do well and take a job at 50,000 and still be ok.
It's T14 or Howard. Don't make the mistake and go to something like Cardozo, notre dame, George Washington etc. at more than twice the price of Howard and its harder to get biglaw.
I have that vibe, lately, just in society in general. I don't want to go to a school like my undergrad (A top UC), I want to go to a place, where their is some help, comrades, and they would like to hire their own... So, if you could message me, or explain this more, this would help. As I'm reapplying to Howard.