169 actually.Michigan has a 167 LSAT median instead of 168? OH the HUMANITY!

169 actually.Michigan has a 167 LSAT median instead of 168? OH the HUMANITY!
and HYS will have 100% yield rates!whymeohgodno wrote:But then schools will have a harder time raising/maintaining medians.Desert Fox wrote:Yea that's pretty much my point.overunderachiever wrote:If we totally got rid of scholarships, then that could happen!How about just charging a lesser tuition rate.
Actually I'm not even sure it would impact their medians much. That ten percent of Michigan who could go to Uchi but don't for money, would go to Uchi. And then the bottom ten % of admits at Uchi would just go to Michigan because they couldn't get Uchi anymore.whymeohgodno wrote:169 actually.Michigan has a 167 LSAT median instead of 168? OH the HUMANITY!
GPA/LSAT medians dont mean shit. Schools just obsess over them because of the US News rankingswhymeohgodno wrote:But then schools will have a harder time raising/maintaining medians.Desert Fox wrote:Yea that's pretty much my point.overunderachiever wrote:If we totally got rid of scholarships, then that could happen!How about just charging a lesser tuition rate.
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Schools would still obsess over them even without USN&WR.dr123 wrote:GPA/LSAT medians dont mean shit. Schools just obsess over them because of the US News rankingswhymeohgodno wrote:But then schools will have a harder time raising/maintaining medians.Desert Fox wrote:Yea that's pretty much my point.overunderachiever wrote:
If we totally got rid of scholarships, then that could happen!
Or the ABA, instead of resting on its laurels, could enforce the dissemination of "basic consumer information" that is accurate and transparent.gwuorbust wrote:I think the solution to the lawl school problem is:
1. get rid of USNWR; AND/OR
2. eliminate merit aid; AND/OR
3. shut down bottom 50 schools OR Quota system
I do not think that data transparency alone will get rid of the TTTT lawl schools. all those schools care about is filling their class. so if there was a sudden drop off caused by info dissemination, I could easily see Cooley, GGU, et. al. advertising on night TV shows getting people to take the LSAT and then enroll. for-profit and sketch technical schools do this all the time. but to believe that the GGUs of this world will go away without a fight is simply naive thinking.scammedhard wrote:Or the ABA, instead of resting on its laurels, could enforce the dissemination of "basic consumer information" that is accurate and transparent.gwuorbust wrote:I think the solution to the lawl school problem is:
1. get rid of USNWR; AND/OR
2. eliminate merit aid; AND/OR
3. shut down bottom 50 schools OR Quota system
I already see T1/T2 schools advertising their law programs on public transit.gwuorbust wrote:I do not think that data transparency alone will get rid of the TTTT lawl schools. all those schools care about is filling their class. so if there was a sudden drop off caused by info dissemination, I could easily see Cooley, GGU, et. al. advertising on night TV shows getting people to take the LSAT and then enroll. for-profit and sketch technical schools do this all the time. but to believe that the GGUs of this world will go away without a fight is simply naive thinking.
gwuorbust wrote:I think the solution to the lawl school problem is:
1. get rid of USNWR; AND/OR
2. eliminate merit aid; AND/OR
3. shut down bottom 50 schools OR Quota system
I am disturbed by the pejorative use of "lawl".scammedhard wrote:I do not think that data transparency alone will get rid of the TTTT lawl schools. all those schools care about is filling their class. so if there was a sudden drop off caused by info dissemination, I could easily see Cooley, GGU, et. al. advertising on night TV shows getting people to take the LSAT and then enroll. for-profit and sketch technical schools do this all the time. but to believe that the GGUs of this world will go away without a fight is simply naive thinking.
Except if there are easily accessible terrible statistics out there, I don't give a rat's ass what stupid people do with their money.gwuorbust wrote:I do not think that data transparency alone will get rid of the TTTT lawl schools. all those schools care about is filling their class. so if there was a sudden drop off caused by info dissemination, I could easily see Cooley, GGU, et. al. advertising on night TV shows getting people to take the LSAT and then enroll. for-profit and sketch technical schools do this all the time. but to believe that the GGUs of this world will go away without a fight is simply naive thinking.scammedhard wrote:Or the ABA, instead of resting on its laurels, could enforce the dissemination of "basic consumer information" that is accurate and transparent.gwuorbust wrote:I think the solution to the lawl school problem is:
1. get rid of USNWR; AND/OR
2. eliminate merit aid; AND/OR
3. shut down bottom 50 schools OR Quota system
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welcome to TLSLawlcat wrote:gwuorbust wrote:I think the solution to the lawl school problem is:
1. get rid of USNWR; AND/OR
2. eliminate merit aid; AND/OR
3. shut down bottom 50 schools OR Quota systemI am disturbed by the pejorative use of "lawl".scammedhard wrote:I do not think that data transparency alone will get rid of the TTTT lawl schools. all those schools care about is filling their class. so if there was a sudden drop off caused by info dissemination, I could easily see Cooley, GGU, et. al. advertising on night TV shows getting people to take the LSAT and then enroll. for-profit and sketch technical schools do this all the time. but to believe that the GGUs of this world will go away without a fight is simply naive thinking.
Agree. So much honesty coming from a law school dean is very suspicious. Maybe there is some fine print...Hannibal wrote:That's a surprisingly open answer I think.
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+1, that was fantastic. And honestly, I think there's a lot of truth to Robert Morse's "read the fine print" line in the article. Part of me feels bad for the kids who lose their scholarship and get hit with a ton of debt from a (likely) weak school in a terrible economy; the other half of me realizes that research is a big part of being a lawyer, and if these kids can't be bothered to investigate their scholarship/financial situation (let alone the job market), then they can deal with the consequences. It seriously amazes me how ignorant many 0Ls are about just what it is they're getting into.Hannibal wrote:That's a surprisingly open answer I think.
not all schools medians are at 3.0. a lot have 3.3 or 3.4 median. you should probably look into that.rocon7383 wrote:i actually have a specific question. Cardozo's scholarship is retainable by keeping a 2.950, which they say is "roughly top 80% of the class".... This doesn't seem right. Are they being misleading? or generous to prevent intense competition?
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Well the median is about 3.15 last I checked, so i know the numbers make sense to me. Its just that it seems oddly generous of them. I guess the predatory nature of a lot of other offers i have gotten has made me skeptical of their offer.gwuorbust wrote:not all schools medians are at 3.0. a lot have 3.3 or 3.4 median. you should probably look into that.rocon7383 wrote:i actually have a specific question. Cardozo's scholarship is retainable by keeping a 2.950, which they say is "roughly top 80% of the class".... This doesn't seem right. Are they being misleading? or generous to prevent intense competition?
That's pretty communist, bro. And people with cush jobs waiting for them at their family's firm do not take out loans.overunderachiever wrote:If virtually everyone is in the same need for tuition than there would be no need-based aid at all. While it may be true that many graduates will come out with significant debt, I think more money should go to those who will have the most trouble paying off that debt and not to those graduates who will work for daddy's firm.Patriot1208 wrote:No it's not. This isn't undergrad, virtually everyone is in the same need for tuition. Very few of those going to law school can afford it without significant debt. This is why graduate programs focus on merit basedoverunderachiever wrote:As the article pointed out, its a damn shame that need-based aid dropped while merit scholarships skyrocketed...just another case of the have's vs. the have-not's
There are reasons to doubt claims like this. You tend to know people in your section better, and you find out gossip like who is on scholarship.glitched wrote:yeah i read this today too. interesting article.
i thought this comment was interesting:
"I actually went to Chicago-Kent several years ago. I was awarded a full merit scholarship with the provision that I maintain a 3.0 to keep the scholarship. The school divided the 1L's into three sections - A, B and C. I was in section A. I noticed over the course of the first month and a half of law school that there seemed to be many more people in section A who were the recipients of merit scholarships than in sections B and C. I clearly remember telling some classmates that it seemed to me that the school had a financial incentive to group more merit scholarship recipients together. Because of the grading curve (which was based on your section), some people were certainly going to lose their scholarship money. They thought I was too cynical, but I thought it seemed like a tactic that could really help the school's bottom line." Giddified Washington, D.C. April 30th, 2011 8:36 pm
if that's true, daayyaamm - there are some smartcriminalsdeans out there.
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