If you want work in a certain region... Forum
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If you want work in a certain region...
There seems to be a general consensus on this site that going T14 is wonderful. This seems fair enough.
There also seems to be a general consensus that most schools (even those in roughly the lower half of the T14 to some degree) have regional reputations. And furthermore, if you know that you want to practice in a certain region, then it is probably wise to attend the law school with the most respective regional clout.
Assuming that working in NYC or DC is irrelevant to you and that you'd much rather work in your smaller market hometown (Pittsburgh or Cleveland or any other city of a similar legal market) would it make more sense to go to the regional T2 or lower end T1 versus a Top14 school if the tuition were substantially lower?
There also seems to be a general consensus that most schools (even those in roughly the lower half of the T14 to some degree) have regional reputations. And furthermore, if you know that you want to practice in a certain region, then it is probably wise to attend the law school with the most respective regional clout.
Assuming that working in NYC or DC is irrelevant to you and that you'd much rather work in your smaller market hometown (Pittsburgh or Cleveland or any other city of a similar legal market) would it make more sense to go to the regional T2 or lower end T1 versus a Top14 school if the tuition were substantially lower?
- northwood
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
i would say apply to a wide band of schools in that region, and go to the school that is the most economically sound. Not necessairly the one that offers you the best scholarship, but the one that your money goes farther ( best job placement for cost of attendance).
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
this is what i have come to think as well.northwood wrote:i would say apply to a wide band of schools in that region, and go to the school that is the most economically sound. Not necessairly the one that offers you the best scholarship, but the one that your money goes farther ( best job placement for cost of attendance).
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
You need to read the Legal Employment forum rather than the 0L forums. There is no such consensus, and especially no such consensus re: the lower half of the T14.lawschoolnonsense wrote:There also seems to be a general consensus that most schools (even those in roughly the lower half of the T14 to some degree) have regional reputations.
The distinction between T14 and T2 is not "do I want to practice in NY/DC or do I want to practice in Pittsburgh/Cleveland/XYZ hometown?"lawschoolnonsense wrote:Assuming that working in NYC or DC is irrelevant to you and that you'd much rather work in your smaller market hometown (Pittsburgh or Cleveland or any other city of a similar legal market) would it make more sense to go to the regional T2 or lower end T1 versus a Top14 school if the tuition were substantially lower?
The distinction between T14 and T2 is "do I want BigLaw in NY/DC/Cleveland/Pittsburgh, or do I want to practice at a smaller firm (or risk unemployment) in NY/DC/Cleveland/Pittsburgh?"
- BruceWayne
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
You must have misread his question. He said that to some degree most of the top 14 have regional reputations; not that it's easy to get a job from the top 14.RVP11 wrote:You need to read the Legal Employment forum rather than the 0L forums. There is no such consensus, and especially no such consensus re: the lower half of the T14.lawschoolnonsense wrote:There also seems to be a general consensus that most schools (even those in roughly the lower half of the T14 to some degree) have regional reputations.
The distinction between T14 and T2 is not "do I want to practice in NY/DC or do I want to practice in Pittsburgh/Cleveland/XYZ hometown?"lawschoolnonsense wrote:Assuming that working in NYC or DC is irrelevant to you and that you'd much rather work in your smaller market hometown (Pittsburgh or Cleveland or any other city of a similar legal market) would it make more sense to go to the regional T2 or lower end T1 versus a Top14 school if the tuition were substantially lower?
The distinction between T14 and T2 is "do I want BigLaw in NY/DC/Cleveland/Pittsburgh, or do I want to practice at a smaller firm (or risk unemployment) in NY/DC/Cleveland/Pittsburgh?"
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- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
I didn't misread anything then. None of the T14 have "regional reputations." That's asinine.BruceWayne wrote:You must have misread his question. He said that to some degree most of the top 14 have regional reputations; not that it's easy to get a job from the top 14.
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
First, it's not asinine. I may, however, have overstated my case. While all of the T14 are recognized nationally. In terms of employment, many of them place regionally. There's a reason why most Berkeley grads stay in Cali and why most G-Town grads stay on the East Coast.RVP11 wrote:I didn't misread anything then. None of the T14 have "regional reputations." That's asinine.BruceWayne wrote:You must have misread his question. He said that to some degree most of the top 14 have regional reputations; not that it's easy to get a job from the top 14.
Second, the criticism that you can't land big law out of a lower T1 or a T2 is simply not true. Just look at the attorney roster for any big firm in any city. You'll find your fair share of HYS, but most of the attorneys will have come from the regionally connected school. Squire Sanders in Cleveland boasts of lawyers from Case Western and Cleveland State. Reed Smith in Pittsburgh has an overwhelming number of Pitt and even Duquesne (a lowly TTTT) grads.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
That's called self-selection. Does it surprise you that people who choose to attend law school in California also choose to practice in California? Does it surprise you that people who choose to attend law school on the east coast also choose to practice on the east coast?lawschoolnonsense wrote:While all of the T14 are recognized nationally. In terms of employment, many of them place regionally. There's a reason why most Berkeley grads stay in Cali and why most G-Town grads stay on the East Coast.
Of all the people I know at my T14, there are only a handful who wanted a certain market and couldn't get a job there. And funny enough, those markets are in what most 0Ls in the Choosing a Law School forum would consider my school's zone of regional strength. Virtually everyone I know who wanted a job in a certain place outside of that zone, and had the requisite ties, got one.
I never said that. I said that if you want BigLaw, you go to a T14. I didn't say that you couldn't get BigLaw from a non-T14.lawschoolnonsense wrote:Second, the criticism that you can't land big law out of a lower T1 or a T2 is simply not true.
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
First, some of those people are a) laterals and b) older. Second, big firms in secondary markets don't hire huge SA classes. So you're competing with your entire school and every school in your region (plus T14'ers) for maybe 10 spots max, 1-2 of which will go to the local schools. Just because there are attorneys from the local schools doesn't mean they were either hired recently or their first job was at that firm. Don't let the numbers fool you. Look at the attorney rosters and look at the years of graduation.lawschoolnonsense wrote:First, it's not asinine. I may, however, have overstated my case. While all of the T14 are recognized nationally. In terms of employment, many of them place regionally. There's a reason why most Berkeley grads stay in Cali and why most G-Town grads stay on the East Coast.RVP11 wrote:I didn't misread anything then. None of the T14 have "regional reputations." That's asinine.BruceWayne wrote:You must have misread his question. He said that to some degree most of the top 14 have regional reputations; not that it's easy to get a job from the top 14.
Second, the criticism that you can't land big law out of a lower T1 or a T2 is simply not true. Just look at the attorney roster for any big firm in any city. You'll find your fair share of HYS, but most of the attorneys will have come from the regionally connected school. Squire Sanders in Cleveland boasts of lawyers from Case Western and Cleveland State. Reed Smith in Pittsburgh has an overwhelming number of Pitt and even Duquesne (a lowly TTTT) grads.
If you want to work in your home region and don't mind small law (or possibly unemployment) or have actual legal connections, then going to the cheap regional isn't the end of the world (but make sure it's actually cheap). That's what I'm currently doing (and I'm in the "connections" bracket).
- Panther7
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
- patrickd139
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
I disagree that it's "that simple." For many regions, not only must you have a law degree and summer work experience in the area, but significant ties as well.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength.RVP11 wrote:That's called self-selection. Does it surprise you that people who choose to attend law school in California also choose to practice in California? Does it surprise you that people who choose to attend law school on the east coast also choose to practice on the east coast?lawschoolnonsense wrote:While all of the T14 are recognized nationally. In terms of employment, many of them place regionally. There's a reason why most Berkeley grads stay in Cali and why most G-Town grads stay on the East Coast.
Of all the people I know at my T14, there are only a handful who wanted a certain market and couldn't get a job there. And funny enough, those markets are in what most 0Ls in the Choosing a Law School forum would consider my school's zone of regional strength. Virtually everyone I know who wanted a job in a certain place outside of that zone, and had the requisite ties, got one.
I never said that. I said that if you want BigLaw, you go to a T14. I didn't say that you couldn't get BigLaw from a non-T14.lawschoolnonsense wrote:Second, the criticism that you can't land big law out of a lower T1 or a T2 is simply not true.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
But there's not a single school in the country that is going to make firms that care about ties suddenly stop caring.thisguy456 wrote:Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength.
Please spend more time in the Legal Employment forum. No school gives you the ticket to practice wherever you want - most firms in most non-DC/NY markets want serious ties, and it's not like they're dropping that requirement for Harvard people but not for Michigan people.
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- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Dude, attending a law school in the area (say, within 100 miles) and summer work experience in the area are pretty significant ties.patrickd139 wrote:I disagree that it's "that simple." For many regions, not only must you have a law degree and summer work experience in the area, but significant ties as well.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Again, if you want to work at a BIG FIRM, it's not that simple.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
Say you wanted to work at a big firm in Denver, and you have Denver ties.
Would it be smarter to attend CU or a T14? The T14, by a landslide.
- Panther7
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Then go to a Cali school and get summer jobs in Denver. TA-DA!!! It's not rocket science.RVP11 wrote:Again, if you want to work at a BIG FIRM, it's not that simple.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
Say you wanted to work at a big firm in Denver, and you have Denver ties.
Would it be smarter to attend CU or a T14? The T14, by a landslide.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
How are California and Colorado the same region? What are you trying to say?Panther7 wrote:Then go to a Cali school and get summer jobs in Denver. TA-DA!!! It's not rocket science.RVP11 wrote:Again, if you want to work at a BIG FIRM, it's not that simple.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
Say you wanted to work at a big firm in Denver, and you have Denver ties.
Would it be smarter to attend CU or a T14? The T14, by a landslide.
Your earlier statement would suggest that someone who knows they want to practice in Colorado should always attend Colorado for law school, even if they want to work for a big firm. That's wrong.
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Who are you telling to spend more time in the Legal Employment forum to? Seems like it was addressed to me, but then you started talking about another issue that maybe someone else brought up, because I didn't. What you said I already know.RVP11 wrote:But there's not a single school in the country that is going to make firms that care about ties suddenly stop caring.thisguy456 wrote:Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength.
Please spend more time in the Legal Employment forum. No school gives you the ticket to practice wherever you want - most firms in most non-DC/NY markets want serious ties, and it's not like they're dropping that requirement for Harvard people but not for Michigan people.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
It was directed to you. Please explain what you mean when you said:thisguy456 wrote:Who are you telling to spend more time in the Legal Employment forum to? Seems like it was addressed to me, but then you started talking about another issue that maybe someone else brought up, because I didn't. What you said I already know.RVP11 wrote:But there's not a single school in the country that is going to make firms that care about ties suddenly stop caring.thisguy456 wrote:Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength.
Please spend more time in the Legal Employment forum. No school gives you the ticket to practice wherever you want - most firms in most non-DC/NY markets want serious ties, and it's not like they're dropping that requirement for Harvard people but not for Michigan people.
"Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength."
If you're trying to say that a school's regional/national strength is measured by how many people WITHOUT requisite ties are getting jobs outside of the school's region, then you're arguing from a false premise. People without requisite ties generally don't get jobs in non-DC/NY markets no matter what law school they attend. Your ties are 100x more important than your school's "national strength" when it comes to getting a job in a different region.
- patrickd139
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
For some regions it is. For other regions, especially some of the more insulated regions not near any one particularly strong regional school, it's insufficient. I'm unfortunately having problems with this right now.RVP11 wrote:Dude, attending a law school in the area (say, within 100 miles) and summer work experience in the area are pretty significant ties.patrickd139 wrote:I disagree that it's "that simple." For many regions, not only must you have a law degree and summer work experience in the area, but significant ties as well.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
They're significant ties. Whether they amount to what firms in your region like to see is a different question.patrickd139 wrote:For some regions it is. For other regions, especially some of the more insulated regions not near any one particularly strong regional school, it's insufficient. I'm unfortunately having problems with this right now.RVP11 wrote:Dude, attending a law school in the area (say, within 100 miles) and summer work experience in the area are pretty significant ties.patrickd139 wrote:I disagree that it's "that simple." For many regions, not only must you have a law degree and summer work experience in the area, but significant ties as well.Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
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- patrickd139
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
I see what you're saying; I was just trying to correct the misconception, below, that going to a LS and doing a SA in that region are enough to get a job in any region.RVP11 wrote: They're significant ties. Whether they amount to what firms in your region like to see is a different question.
Panther7 wrote:If you know what region you want to work in, go to the best school in that region and find summer jobs in that region. Seriously. It's that simple.
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
Mentioning instances of people finding jobs outside of a school's considered region doesn't really say a lot. I don't know how else to put it. I can list any number of schools with people getting jobs outside the region. I'm not sure what the point is.RVP11 wrote:It was directed to you. Please explain what you mean when you said:thisguy456 wrote:Who are you telling to spend more time in the Legal Employment forum to? Seems like it was addressed to me, but then you started talking about another issue that maybe someone else brought up, because I didn't. What you said I already know.RVP11 wrote:But there's not a single school in the country that is going to make firms that care about ties suddenly stop caring.thisguy456 wrote:Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength.
Please spend more time in the Legal Employment forum. No school gives you the ticket to practice wherever you want - most firms in most non-DC/NY markets want serious ties, and it's not like they're dropping that requirement for Harvard people but not for Michigan people.
"Citing people you know who found jobs outside a school's supposed region and also having the "requisite ties" says little about a school's regional/national strength."
If you're trying to say that a school's regional/national strength is measured by how many people WITHOUT requisite ties are getting jobs outside of the school's region, then you're arguing from a false premise. People without requisite ties generally don't get jobs in non-DC/NY markets no matter what law school they attend. Your ties are 100x more important than your school's "national strength" when it comes to getting a job in a different region.
I don't argue people WITHOUT requisite ties getting jobs outside a school's region is any kind of barometer. Ties alone aren't enough to get a job outside a school's region. The school can still matter. And in that regard I don't think it's too outlandish or asinine to consider some schools even in the T14 to behave more regionally than others.
- RVP11
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
I'll be shocked if you can find a 2L/3L at any T14 who agrees.thisguy456 wrote:And in that regard I don't think it's too outlandish or asinine to consider some schools even in the T14 to behave more regionally than others.
I know it makes a lot of threads on TLS a whole lot less fun, but it's not easy to categorize the T14. Self-selection plays a huge role with schools at this level and ties are at least 10x more important than your school.
- FlanAl
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Re: If you want work in a certain region...
my guess would be that pretty soon the opposite is going to be true for a few schools in the t-14. i'd think we'd see the chicago and dc schools place less regionally than before because those markets are getting so slammed. we'll probably see a lot of georgetown all over the place and not so heavy into dc and my guess is that its one of the t14's people see as regional.
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