Re: Cooley
Posted: Fri Jan 21, 2011 11:23 pm
I lol'd. Somehow the username/avatar makes it much, much better.retake wrote:retake
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I lol'd. Somehow the username/avatar makes it much, much better.retake wrote:retake
I'm just surprised someone hasn't taken it already.beachbum wrote:I lol'd. Somehow the username/avatar makes it much, much better.retake wrote:retake
Don't worry about it, when you post your own rankings because you claim that an outside ranking system lacks "objectivity," and then you rank your tier 4 school (12) above:DubPoker wrote:edit: I honestly thought it was too awesome to not have been posted already, but I have not seen it and I've been lurking for a while
Isn't a 123 basically just slightly above the bare minimum score possible?serdog wrote:you need a lest 143 for full time but part time you only need and index of 91 which would be a min of 127 with a 4.33 if you pick restricted part time you would need a 123 with a GPA of 4.33 so 123 is the floor at Cooley
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where is the 4th campus? are they expanding again??Applicants who are offered admission after completion of the qualifying program may choose to attend classes at three of Cooley's four campuses: Lansing, Auburn Hills, or Grand Rapids. Students may take a maximum of 9 credit hours for the first two semesters. Participation in academic support programs is required.
Ann Arbor as if they have a chance at going against U of M.northwood wrote:where is the 4th campus? are they expanding again??Applicants who are offered admission after completion of the qualifying program may choose to attend classes at three of Cooley's four campuses: Lansing, Auburn Hills, or Grand Rapids. Students may take a maximum of 9 credit hours for the first two semesters. Participation in academic support programs is required.
most um grads don't practice in a2. Though the legal market in a2 is pretty fucked so i doubt cooley grads do eitherNoJob wrote:Ann Arbor as if they have a chance at going against U of M.northwood wrote:where is the 4th campus? are they expanding again??Applicants who are offered admission after completion of the qualifying program may choose to attend classes at three of Cooley's four campuses: Lansing, Auburn Hills, or Grand Rapids. Students may take a maximum of 9 credit hours for the first two semesters. Participation in academic support programs is required.
I dont know the answer. But neither grade will give you a chance at a law job in Michigan. Frankly, the Cooley degree in general will ensure your resume's prompt placement in the recycling bin.traehekat wrote:Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what Cooley curves to? B? B-?
Actually was able to find it on NALP. 2.7 if anyone is curious, which is between a B and B- at Cooley.NoJob wrote:I dont know the answer. But neither grade will give you a chance at a law job in Michigan. Frankly, the Cooley degree in general will ensure your resume's prompt placement in the recycling bin.traehekat wrote:Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what Cooley curves to? B? B-?
That's 2.7 at graduation. Considering their double-digit attrition rate, I'm guessing 1L classes are curved below that.traehekat wrote:Actually was able to find it on NALP. 2.7 if anyone is curious, which is between a B and B- at Cooley.NoJob wrote:I dont know the answer. But neither grade will give you a chance at a law job in Michigan. Frankly, the Cooley degree in general will ensure your resume's prompt placement in the recycling bin.traehekat wrote:Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what Cooley curves to? B? B-?
This man came upon great fortune with the name 'retake'beachbum wrote:I lol'd. Somehow the username/avatar makes it much, much better.retake wrote:retake
Ah, yes. Good call.JusticeHarlan wrote:That's 2.7 at graduation. Considering their double-digit attrition rate, I'm guessing 1L classes are curved below that.traehekat wrote:Actually was able to find it on NALP. 2.7 if anyone is curious, which is between a B and B- at Cooley.NoJob wrote:I dont know the answer. But neither grade will give you a chance at a law job in Michigan. Frankly, the Cooley degree in general will ensure your resume's prompt placement in the recycling bin.traehekat wrote:Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what Cooley curves to? B? B-?
B-traehekat wrote:Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what Cooley curves to? B? B-?
No, but that isn't much of the USNWR rankings either. You just cited my favorite component of the USNews rubric (along with LSAT), and the ONLY one I actually care about directly.nealric wrote:As much as I love the Cooley rankings for the fact that they place my alma matter ahead of Yale, you have got to be kidding. Do you really think that "number of chairs in the library" is a more valid metric than a survey of what judges and lawyers think of the school?Fourth, its rankings that it uses is frankly no more bogus than that ranking used by USNWR. Who is to say that Cooley's rankings aren't more valid?
Are you trying to say you go to Cooley?flcath wrote:No, but that isn't much of the USNWR rankings either. You just cited my favorite component of the USNews rubric (along with LSAT), and the ONLY one I actually care about directly.nealric wrote:As much as I love the Cooley rankings for the fact that they place my alma matter ahead of Yale, you have got to be kidding. Do you really think that "number of chairs in the library" is a more valid metric than a survey of what judges and lawyers think of the school?Fourth, its rankings that it uses is frankly no more bogus than that ranking used by USNWR. Who is to say that Cooley's rankings aren't more valid?
Notably: I do not give two shits about what other law professors think of the law professors at my school, based (presumably) on the law review articles that they write to each other. Nor do I understand why any student would care about this.
No. I actually care greatly about what lawyers and judges (read: employers) think of my degree, and was making the point that that criterion is really the only intrinsically relevant (from the law students' perspective) one in the USNWR metric.TJISMYHERO wrote:Are you trying to say you go to Cooley?flcath wrote:No, but that isn't much of the USNWR rankings either. You just cited my favorite component of the USNews rubric (along with LSAT), and the ONLY one I actually care about directly.nealric wrote:As much as I love the Cooley rankings for the fact that they place my alma matter ahead of Yale, you have got to be kidding. Do you really think that "number of chairs in the library" is a more valid metric than a survey of what judges and lawyers think of the school?Fourth, its rankings that it uses is frankly no more bogus than that ranking used by USNWR. Who is to say that Cooley's rankings aren't more valid?
Notably: I do not give two shits about what other law professors think of the law professors at my school, based (presumably) on the law review articles that they write to each other. Nor do I understand why any student would care about this.
And so the bigTJISMYHERO wrote:flcath wrote:No, but that isn't much of the USNWR rankings either. You just cited my favorite component of the USNews rubric (along with LSAT), and the ONLY one I actually care about directly.nealric wrote:As much as I love the Cooley rankings for the fact that they place my alma matter ahead of Yale, you have got to be kidding. Do you really think that "number of chairs in the library" is a more valid metric than a survey of what judges and lawyers think of the school?Fourth, its rankings that it uses is frankly no more bogus than that ranking used by USNWR. Who is to say that Cooley's rankings aren't more valid?
Notably: I do not give two shits about what other law professors think of the law professors at my school, based (presumably) on the law review articles that they write to each other. Nor do I understand why any student would care about this.
Are you trying to say you go to Cooley?
And so the bigAqualibrium wrote:TJISMYHERO wrote:No, but that isn't much of the USNWR rankings either. You just cited my favorite component of the USNews rubric (along with LSAT), and the ONLY one I actually care about directly.flcath wrote: As much as I love the Cooley rankings for the fact that they place my alma matter ahead of Yale, you have got to be kidding. Do you really think that "number of chairs in the library" is a more valid metric than a survey of what judges and lawyers think of the school?
Notably: I do not give two shits about what other law professors think of the law professors at my school, based (presumably) on the law review articles that they write to each other. Nor do I understand why any student would care about this.
Are you trying to say you go to Cooley?
I do not and would not ever go to Cooley. I was bored at work and wanted to see how long it took for simple spelling errors to get thrased and bashed on TLS. ! Ps sorry it took me so long to get back to this thread.fundamentallybroken wrote:We've been waiting for you.stintez wrote:this thread is lame and full ofduchedouche bagsorandidoitsidiots.
damn, thought this thread was dead. LOL about the $10 thing, I would think you'd never have to pay to review an exam, but I'm a 0L.traehekat wrote:I'm not one for shitting on schools (especially schools that already get shit on a lot), but apparently if you are a student and Cooley and you want to review your old exams with your professor, it costs you $10 to get a copy of the blue book. Never heard of something like this. Is it normal to charge students to review exams?
Your school just hides the cost in "facility fees."traehekat wrote:I'm not one for shitting on schools (especially schools that already get shit on a lot), but apparently if you are a student and Cooley and you want to review your old exams with your professor, it costs you $10 to get a copy of the blue book. Never heard of something like this. Is it normal to charge students to review exams?