If they are generally quite quick at evaluating applications, one would think that a long delay is more a good thing than a bad thing. At least they don't want to discard you!annapavlova wrote:I've been complete since early mid-November.
This is really annoying.
University of San Diego School of Law Forum
- Lotario de Conti
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2009 7:10 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
I'm going to the ASD on 6 April, anyone else?
- savagedm
- Posts: 392
- Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 2:51 am
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
wildcats12 wrote:anyone going to the admitted students day on April 20th?
would love to if I were admitted
- Jones, Dow
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Wed Feb 18, 2009 3:42 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
anyone know how the housing bust has affected the rental market here? Is COL significantly lower than it was a few years ago?
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2008 3:52 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Great question any one living in SD have any idea?Jones, Dow wrote:anyone know how the housing bust has affected the rental market here? Is COL significantly lower than it was a few years ago?
- SandyCohen
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Fri Feb 27, 2009 1:55 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
San Diego maintains a high cost of living and seems to be relatively unaffected by the current economic situation. Even though there appears to be a small increase in rentals on the market, prices continue to remain high. A lot of USD students reside in Pacific Beach where rent tends to be higher than most areas. On the up side, bars are offering better deals
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- TheRyanocerous
- Posts: 147
- Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 2:20 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big law jobs in san diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
- EBrown1
- Posts: 3
- Joined: Fri Jan 23, 2009 2:13 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Dissapointed, just had a talk with admissions, here's what I learned:
*with 5,000 applicants, it's difficult to get decisions to everyone by april and there's a lot of people concerned with 04/01 deposits, but they will just have to wait until May.
How refreshing, thanks for your help and for, you know, checking on my individual file. Way to respond to my concern.
..not.
I think i'm just feeling dejected (while waiting on 5 schools) and need a hug.
*with 5,000 applicants, it's difficult to get decisions to everyone by april and there's a lot of people concerned with 04/01 deposits, but they will just have to wait until May.
How refreshing, thanks for your help and for, you know, checking on my individual file. Way to respond to my concern.
..not.
I think i'm just feeling dejected (while waiting on 5 schools) and need a hug.
- cmaho9qy
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 5:36 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
There's no "hug" option on this thing, but I'm giving you a mental one. I totally hear ya. I'm getting no love from the Pacific Northwest, and I want to knooooow before seat deposits are due everywhere else, DAMNIT! Now off to check my email to see if my whining has one me any accepts.EBrown1 wrote:Dissapointed, just had a talk with admissions, here's what I learned:
*with 5,000 applicants, it's difficult to get decisions to everyone by april and there's a lot of people concerned with 04/01 deposits, but they will just have to wait until May.
How refreshing, thanks for your help and for, you know, checking on my individual file. Way to respond to my concern.
..not.
I think i'm just feeling dejected (while waiting on 5 schools) and need a hug.
- Lotario de Conti
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2009 7:10 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Thanks for posting this, TheRyanocerous. I was quite high on USD for a long time leading up to being accepted, but accounts like these, of which there seem to be far too many, have really knocked it down my list as well.TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
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- Posts: 18
- Joined: Thu Apr 03, 2008 2:41 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
what did you think of the student body and the other admitted students?TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
- Jones, Dow
- Posts: 110
- Joined: Wed Feb 18, 2009 3:42 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Forget just the Pacific NW, I applied to 9 schools west of Kansas and I haven't heard from ANY of them!!!cmaho9qy wrote:There's no "hug" option on this thing, but I'm giving you a mental one. I totally hear ya. I'm getting no love from the Pacific Northwest, and I want to knooooow before seat deposits are due everywhere else, DAMNIT! Now off to check my email to see if my whining has one me any accepts.EBrown1 wrote:Dissapointed, just had a talk with admissions, here's what I learned:
*with 5,000 applicants, it's difficult to get decisions to everyone by april and there's a lot of people concerned with 04/01 deposits, but they will just have to wait until May.
How refreshing, thanks for your help and for, you know, checking on my individual file. Way to respond to my concern.
..not.
I think i'm just feeling dejected (while waiting on 5 schools) and need a hug.
- cmaho9qy
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 5:36 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Edit: "one"??? oh no... no wonder I'm not getting any love from the Pacific Northwest.cmaho9qy wrote:There's no "hug" option on this thing, but I'm giving you a mental one. I totally hear ya. I'm getting no love from the Pacific Northwest, and I want to knooooow before seat deposits are due everywhere else, DAMNIT! Now off to check my email to see if my whining has one me any accepts.EBrown1 wrote:Dissapointed, just had a talk with admissions, here's what I learned:
*with 5,000 applicants, it's difficult to get decisions to everyone by april and there's a lot of people concerned with 04/01 deposits, but they will just have to wait until May.
How refreshing, thanks for your help and for, you know, checking on my individual file. Way to respond to my concern.
..not.
I think i'm just feeling dejected (while waiting on 5 schools) and need a hug.
- TheRyanocerous
- Posts: 147
- Joined: Wed Oct 22, 2008 2:20 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
The admitted students that I hung out with all had the same concerns I did and were not all that impressed with the program. That being said, I thought they were all pretty cool, but the ones I connected with probably are not going there. I did not get along with the local SD people all that well and they seemed to be the ones most interested in the program. The student body was a mixed bag, and seemed fairly typical of any law school. Granted, I did not get to talk to them in any sort of informal setting like I did the admitted students so I am not sure what they are like on a personal level.wildcats12 wrote:what did you think of the student body and the other admitted students?TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
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- cmaho9qy
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 5:36 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Thanks for posting all of this... very good insight for those of us too stretched for time and money to make it to the ASD. This is the general feeling that I am getting about USD, which is really too bad because boy would I love to go to school in San Diego (or at least I think I would).TheRyanocerous wrote:The admitted students that I hung out with all had the same concerns I did and were not all that impressed with the program. That being said, I thought they were all pretty cool, but the ones I connected with probably are not going there. I did not get along with the local SD people all that well and they seemed to be the ones most interested in the program. The student body was a mixed bag, and seemed fairly typical of any law school. Granted, I did not get to talk to them in any sort of informal setting like I did the admitted students so I am not sure what they are like on a personal level.wildcats12 wrote:what did you think of the student body and the other admitted students?TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
While I'm at it, maybe someone on this board has some insight on this: So far I've been accepted to Idaho, Denver, and San Diego. I've already declined on Idaho and I'm waiting to hear from L&C (second review with not much space left, I'm told), Oregon, and Seattle. Assuming that I don't get in to any of the schools I haven't heard from (or at least assuming that I don't hear from them by April 10th when DU's seat deposit is due), I'm leaning toward putting my deposit down at Denver over San Diego. Job prospects seem similar, the cost is lower (tuition and COL), and I think I'm more likely to want to spend a bunch of years directly following LS in Denver than in San Diego. Any thoughts? Good idea? Horrible idea?
Thanks in advance!
- Lotario de Conti
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2009 7:10 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
How does it feel to you though? I think Denver is a good regional school with good connections to its city, but that bar passage rate makes me cringe.cmaho9qy wrote: While I'm at it, maybe someone on this board has some insight on this: So far I've been accepted to Idaho, Denver, and San Diego. I've already declined on Idaho and I'm waiting to hear from L&C (second review with not much space left, I'm told), Oregon, and Seattle. Assuming that I don't get in to any of the schools I haven't heard from (or at least assuming that I don't hear from them by April 10th when DU's seat deposit is due), I'm leaning toward putting my deposit down at Denver over San Diego. Job prospects seem similar, the cost is lower (tuition and COL), and I think I'm more likely to want to spend a bunch of years directly following LS in Denver than in San Diego. Any thoughts? Good idea? Horrible idea?
Thanks in advance!
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- Posts: 1
- Joined: Sun Mar 29, 2009 1:04 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Hello, I am also considering USD, but I am turned off by the high price tag. I currently live in Phoenix, and some local attorneys here have told me that the school is reflected upon well here in the AZ job market, so don't lose hope completely that you won't find a job. You just may not find one Cali, but there are other markets that would find you very hireable.
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Fri Nov 21, 2008 3:52 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Thanks for sharing. Did anyone else have the opportunity to attend the ASD at San Diego? Any thoughts on it would be great.TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole. The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD. The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego. These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego. San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
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- cmaho9qy
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 5:36 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
It makes me cringe too... although apparently their bar passage rate has gone up to something like 80% as of last year (according to someone who attended the ASD there). So if that's the case, it seems like they've made some pretty great strides.Lotario de Conti wrote:How does it feel to you though? I think Denver is a good regional school with good connections to its city, but that bar passage rate makes me cringe.cmaho9qy wrote: While I'm at it, maybe someone on this board has some insight on this: So far I've been accepted to Idaho, Denver, and San Diego. I've already declined on Idaho and I'm waiting to hear from L&C (second review with not much space left, I'm told), Oregon, and Seattle. Assuming that I don't get in to any of the schools I haven't heard from (or at least assuming that I don't hear from them by April 10th when DU's seat deposit is due), I'm leaning toward putting my deposit down at Denver over San Diego. Job prospects seem similar, the cost is lower (tuition and COL), and I think I'm more likely to want to spend a bunch of years directly following LS in Denver than in San Diego. Any thoughts? Good idea? Horrible idea?
Thanks in advance!
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- Posts: 14
- Joined: Mon Oct 27, 2008 5:12 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Jones, Dow wrote:anyone know how the housing bust has affected the rental market here? Is COL significantly lower than it was a few years ago?
I live in SD and have been renting since 04. The rental market has not taken as hard of a hit as the home buying market. Oddly it is way cheaper to buy than rent, but being a student and not having an income may not be much of an option. A lot of students do live in the PB area, but that is a lot of UG students and it can be a bit trite after some time. Mission Valley is pretty close also, but has maintained its Mission Valley Rent Price Tag. A lot of people are starting to buy up forclosures and then renting them out because mortages are cheaper than rental rates. The one good thing is that gas is still under $3/gallon. Grocery stores still have the usual specials. I spend about 150 or so a month on groceries and go out to eat maybe twice a week. I dont go to USD myself but I am applying next cycle and hope to get in with some $$$. I am working full time right now so I am looking to buy a house while the getting is good still. But to answer your question the COL is not as bad or as low as people would think or want. The rental market is still strong here as most people have to rent after they are forclosed on. And one report has it that the housing market is recovering quicker in So Cal cause it hit us sooner than the rest of the nation
- savagedm
- Posts: 392
- Joined: Mon Jun 02, 2008 2:51 am
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
did the USD app checker change before a decision was sent? Mine still says "In Committee"...
- Lotario de Conti
- Posts: 17
- Joined: Sun Mar 15, 2009 7:10 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Yes, mine said 'decision rendered' or something similar.savagedm wrote:did the USD app checker change before a decision was sent? Mine still says "In Committee"...
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- paulcaruso21
- Posts: 1
- Joined: Wed Mar 25, 2009 5:20 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Fellow TLS posters,
Hey, my name is Paul and I am an avid reader of TLS. I am currently a sophomore student at Arizona State, majoring in Philosophy. I have an uncle that is a Professor of Law at USD, he is a director of one of the USD law centers as well. He did his undergrad at USD before attending Yale for LS. I am just wondering if this could have an impact on my admission to USD? I love the school and I am going to visit the campus, along with others in the So-Cal area, this summer. I kind of screwed up my freshman year and now am having to re-take a few classes to get my GPA back up. I expect to graduate with about a 3.1/3.2 at the very least and I will begin studying for LSAT this summer (taking it July 2010). I have always done great on tests similar to the LSAT, so I truly expect to get above a 166. I will be getting married in the San Diego area after my fiancee and I graduate in May 2011. I have also recently started an Animal Rescue Foundation in Arizona and hope to partner up with ARF (Tony LaRussa's [manager/coach of the St. Louis Cardinals] Animal Rescue Foundation) next fall to start an Arizona chapter, as they are based in the Bay Area. With all of these factors and my desire to pursue a career in Crimal Defense and Animal Rights (pro bono work) in the San Diego area, would it help me in getting accepted into USD? Please answer honestly, especially about the fact of my uncle being a highly respected law professor and alumni there.
Thanks a lot guys!
Hey, my name is Paul and I am an avid reader of TLS. I am currently a sophomore student at Arizona State, majoring in Philosophy. I have an uncle that is a Professor of Law at USD, he is a director of one of the USD law centers as well. He did his undergrad at USD before attending Yale for LS. I am just wondering if this could have an impact on my admission to USD? I love the school and I am going to visit the campus, along with others in the So-Cal area, this summer. I kind of screwed up my freshman year and now am having to re-take a few classes to get my GPA back up. I expect to graduate with about a 3.1/3.2 at the very least and I will begin studying for LSAT this summer (taking it July 2010). I have always done great on tests similar to the LSAT, so I truly expect to get above a 166. I will be getting married in the San Diego area after my fiancee and I graduate in May 2011. I have also recently started an Animal Rescue Foundation in Arizona and hope to partner up with ARF (Tony LaRussa's [manager/coach of the St. Louis Cardinals] Animal Rescue Foundation) next fall to start an Arizona chapter, as they are based in the Bay Area. With all of these factors and my desire to pursue a career in Crimal Defense and Animal Rights (pro bono work) in the San Diego area, would it help me in getting accepted into USD? Please answer honestly, especially about the fact of my uncle being a highly respected law professor and alumni there.
Thanks a lot guys!
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- Posts: 2
- Joined: Thu Apr 16, 2009 4:26 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
As a current 2L at USD, I felt the need to respond to your comments since I actually have experience with everything you discussed. I hope some of my insight can alleviate some concerns. I'd hate to see people give up on a school due to misinformation.TheRyanocerous wrote:I went to the Admitted Students Day last Monday at USD and I had mixed reviews about the program as a whole.
I'll address your comments subject by subject.
TheRyanocerous wrote:The campus was beautiful, it was the most well maintained place I have seen, but the law facilities were less than impressive. Both the law library and the school of law were very dated and seemed right out of the 1970's. This is not of huge concern but for the price and looking at the surrounding buildings I expected more from USD.
Indeed the campus is gorgeous. The law school buildings, however, are admittedly lacking on the inside. That said, over the past two years, the school has made efforts to improve the buildings where it can. The classrooms have all received new chairs, the law school main floor has been completely redone, and the library has seen the majority of the old wooden chairs replaced with new office desk chairs. There is still improvements that can, and will, be made, but even as it stands now, it's by no means a problem. You spend limited time in class itself, and the time you spend out of class can be spent anywhere on campus or San Diego for that matter. There are numerous beautiful places right on campus you can get your work done.
This is where you have to be realistic. Unless you are a top 20 school candidate, most other schools, especially in the second tier will pose this problem. I considered attending schools ranked between 45-100 all over the country. The reach for all of them was the same as San Diego -- great in the area, but the further away you get, the less job prospects that exist. I know several students at other similarly ranked schools to USD and this has been confirmed in their job searches. At least USD is the strongest school, by far, in San Diego. Therefore, in SD you're going to have great job opportunities based on that fact alone.TheRyanocerous wrote:The program looked strong in several areas such as tax law but the career prospects seem extremely shaky. USD does not place well outside of the San Diego area (this is according to several faculty members I spoke with) mainly due to a lack of name recognition and a sparse alumni base outside San Diego.
Additionally, USD does reach up and down California. Personally, I am going to be working in the Bay Area this summer at a great firm. I got my job through USD. Oh, and I'm not in the top 10% of the class. I have other friends working in the Bay Area this summer, some in Vegas, others in D.C., and all over Orange County and LA.
My point is, despite the lack of a national reputation, which few, if any T2 schools have, USD places relatively well outside of SD.
Basically everyone I know in the top 10% of the class has a Big Firm job that wanted one. Obviously USC and UCLA will get a fair number of the Big Firm jobs in SD. If you think that isn't the case in any other big city, like NYC, SF, Chicago, LA, Miami, etc, you're being unrealistic. Big Firm jobs in any city are generally taken by the top 14 school students and then the top 5-10% of the local T2 school(s)'s students.TheRyanocerous wrote:These same faculty members also informed me that schools like USC and UCLA receive the lions share of Big Law jobs in San Diego.
Again, your expectations need to be realistic. If your goal is Big Law, you either need to stick to the top schools or stay in the top of your class. I don't care what T2 you attend.
It is a small legal market. That said, the beauty of being in SD at the best SD law school is the opportunity to meet and network with local attorneys. Many people I know have done this and landed their summer jobs from it.TheRyanocerous wrote:San Diego seems to be a really small legal market with stiff competition and high cost of living. Hearing my fears echoed in the faculty and student body first hand has given me serious doubts about the school. I went in with it being my first choice and I left with it being out of the running, which is unfortunate because I had very high hopes.
In addition, we have a job board (it's all online) where jobs are posted on a regular basis. Of course, this gives us first crack at lots of jobs in SD because many of these firms are looking for someone who can do some part-time work during the semester. This has led many people to summer and full-time post grad jobs as well. I got my part-time job for the semester using this resource and it could've turned into a summer position had I not chosen to move up north. Again, just another example of what kind of job prospects are out there.
I'm sure some people at USD are struggling to find summer jobs still. And I bet such is the case at almost any school in the country. That said, I can't speak for other schools, but of all my good friends at USD - up and down the rankings - only about two are still looking for jobs. Everyone else I know has already got something lined up.
Bottom line: if you attend USD and work hard enough, take advantage of some of the opportunities the school offers (i.e. moot court, clinics, law review, alumni events, etc.), you will succeed. I promise you. And you'll do so while going to law school in an environment that makes a really stressful time in your life enjoyable.
Good luck!
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- Posts: 2
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Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Pick the school that will leave you with less debt at the end and in the area you are hoping to practice after law school. Neither school has great national placement, so while it's certainly possible to find a job elsewhere (see my post above), there is a good chance you will at least start working within 100 miles of whichever school you choose.cmaho9qy wrote:While I'm at it, maybe someone on this board has some insight on this: So far I've been accepted to Idaho, Denver, and San Diego. I've already declined on Idaho and I'm waiting to hear from L&C (second review with not much space left, I'm told), Oregon, and Seattle. Assuming that I don't get in to any of the schools I haven't heard from (or at least assuming that I don't hear from them by April 10th when DU's seat deposit is due), I'm leaning toward putting my deposit down at Denver over San Diego. Job prospects seem similar, the cost is lower (tuition and COL), and I think I'm more likely to want to spend a bunch of years directly following LS in Denver than in San Diego. Any thoughts? Good idea? Horrible idea?
Thanks in advance!
Denver and San Diego are both incredible cities for different reasons. You really need to visit both and see which one seems more suited to your personality and needs.
- cmaho9qy
- Posts: 40
- Joined: Wed Feb 11, 2009 5:36 pm
Re: University of San Diego School of Law
Thanks for the insight... turns out I'm going to none of the above though! Seattle U for me in the fall.YanksFanUSD wrote:Pick the school that will leave you with less debt at the end and in the area you are hoping to practice after law school. Neither school has great national placement, so while it's certainly possible to find a job elsewhere (see my post above), there is a good chance you will at least start working within 100 miles of whichever school you choose.cmaho9qy wrote:While I'm at it, maybe someone on this board has some insight on this: So far I've been accepted to Idaho, Denver, and San Diego. I've already declined on Idaho and I'm waiting to hear from L&C (second review with not much space left, I'm told), Oregon, and Seattle. Assuming that I don't get in to any of the schools I haven't heard from (or at least assuming that I don't hear from them by April 10th when DU's seat deposit is due), I'm leaning toward putting my deposit down at Denver over San Diego. Job prospects seem similar, the cost is lower (tuition and COL), and I think I'm more likely to want to spend a bunch of years directly following LS in Denver than in San Diego. Any thoughts? Good idea? Horrible idea?
Thanks in advance!
Denver and San Diego are both incredible cities for different reasons. You really need to visit both and see which one seems more suited to your personality and needs.
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