TheSpanishMain wrote:ManoftheHour wrote:OP, did you just choose random schools to apply to? New Mexico? Oregon? Florida? Doesn't make any sense...
This.
OP, I'm not sure you're aware of how regional most law schools are, and how much many legal markets value ties to the region. You can't just show up in a random place with a degree from the local regional. Locals are going to have the best chance at jobs from these schools, leaving out-of-town randoms with a greater chance of being part of that unemployed/underemployed group. If you want to break into a market you have no ties to, you need to either A) go to a T14 or B) move to that area several years in advance of law school.
I really appreciate your input fellas, all of you. To clarify: I didn't choose at random, because I actually picked law schools that I see myself living in for the long haul.
Your comment about out of towners does put things into perspective, but would small ties in FL (some family that aren't extremely far removed and several friends from childhood and undergrad) help me avoid falling into the unemployed/underemployed categories? Even though Miami is regional, it doesn't make sense that a private school with almost half of its students from Northeastern states + a fairly strong alumni network HAS TO be so dependent on preexisting ties.
Brut wrote:btw too bad u "can't retake"
the vast majority of posters here get top schools with good financial aid
just for a few measly months of studying
they'll be taking those biglaw jobs you're talking about
too bad that you "can't retake" and are stuck picking between a cheap toilet and an expensive toilet
I used my 3rd administration in December
Brut wrote:with oregon you graduate debt-free
but only 47% of grads found a full-time, long-term, jd-required job nine months after graduation
and 29.1% were underemployed
and that was in a particularly good year, last year it was 37.9%/44.1%
in other words, more grads were underemployed than got ft/lt/jd work last year
if u go with this option, make sure u have a back-up plan in case the law thing doesn't work out
maybe get a cdl or some other certification, just in case
sadly, this may give you a better shot at gainful employment than an oregon jd
on the other hand miami has 'better' numbers, 60.5%/21.4%
but you'll never pay off the loans, not on the types of salaries miami grads make
so if you are fortunate enough to get a paying legal job out of miami
you can look forward to forking over a nice slice of your income to uncle sam for the next 20 years as u paye/ibr the debt down
the debt is non-dischargable btw
and ol uncle sam isn't thru with u yet, he has a special tax bomb for u on any forgiven debt
so then u get to owe money to the irs, who i hear are spectacular ppl to work w
pick ur poison
when both options r near-suicidal, idk how much difference it makes
mayyyb i'd pick oregon over miami
bc a quick blow to the head seems like less suffering than slowly bleeding out
Regarding this, Miami's incoming class is going down from 300+ to around 200. Since LST's data is based on 2013's graduating class of 400+, couldn't we reasonably expect this to increase odds of securing 2017 employment? The combination of Southern Florida's legal market growth + Miami's decreasing class sizes makes this a logical inference.
**I know that securing a job with a yearly salary equal to one's debt is the rule-of-thumb, but all of this makes me wonder — what WOULD a manageable debt-level be for a Miami grad that ISN'T biglaw or midlaw?