C/O 2010 Employment Statistics Google Doc Forum
- drmguy
- Posts: 1004
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C/O 2010 Employment Statistics Google Doc
I was posting in the other thread, but since I spent a long time on this I don't want it to disappear on page 5 of the other thread.
Detailed Employment Statistics
If you have any suggestions for changes let me know.
Here's the source: http://placementsummary.abaquestionnaire.org/home.aspx
Detailed Employment Statistics
If you have any suggestions for changes let me know.
Here's the source: http://placementsummary.abaquestionnaire.org/home.aspx
Last edited by drmguy on Thu Apr 19, 2012 8:20 pm, edited 4 times in total.
- romothesavior
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
- drmguy
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
I didn't really look over all the data until now.
Holy crap Hastings
Holy crap Hastings
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Is this at graduation or 9 months?
- drmguy
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
9 monthsJamesChapman23 wrote:Is this at graduation or 9 months?
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
if you look at the data back a few years of the go-to schools, Vandy, USC, UCLA, and UT do seem to have a subgroupromothesavior wrote:I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
BU/BC/Fordham pulling away from GW, Emory, ND, and WUSTL appears to a little bit more recent, and might just be due to NYC not being hit as bad and/or recovering a little bit faster than other places. A more long term difference is that some of these schools have consistently higher A-III clerkships numbers than others in this group (ND and Emory higher than some T-14's) --LinkRemoved-- (obviously reporting errors have something to do with Washington, Zona, Charleston, and maybe Georgia, Colorado, UNLV and Bama though I don't think anyone can for sure call BS, they could really just load up in their home market...not sure who else would clerk in the N.D.Ala)
Also,not sure that we can trust any Illinois self-reporting stats....
- Blindmelon
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Confirms that USC belongs with BU/BC/Fordham more than it does the UCLA/Vand group.romothesavior wrote:I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
How so? Romo's analysis seems pretty spot on to me.Blindmelon wrote:Confirms that USC belongs with BU/BC/Fordham more than it does the UCLA/Vand group.romothesavior wrote:I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
- Blindmelon
- Posts: 1708
- Joined: Thu Mar 26, 2009 11:13 am
Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
51+/fed: USC 40.5% Fordham 39.7% BC 39.2% BU 38.8%.... UCLA: 43.3%; Vand 46%.chimp wrote:How so?Blindmelon wrote:Confirms that USC belongs with BU/BC/Fordham more than it does the UCLA/Vand group.romothesavior wrote:I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
USC is definitely closer to F/BC/BU than to UCLA/Vand.... if you look at 250+ people firms its less so, but I also don't think that being a 250+ firm automatically makes it a more desirable job or less competitive.
The tab with academia/PI, etc. is a little less accurate methinks given that the "academia" category can often be BS.
- paulshortys10
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
this is data for the 2010 class right?
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Seems like you just picked a random data point. For firms of 250+ and Fed clerkships, USC beats out Vandy, Texas, and UCLA. Also, in the 50+ firm and fed clerkship category, USC and Texas are pretty much identical. I don't understand how the data you pointed out justifies your conclusion, especially considering the fact that it's just one year's worth of data.Blindmelon wrote:51+/fed: USC 40.5% Fordham 39.7% BC 39.2% BU 38.8%.... UCLA: 43.3%; Vand 46%.chimp wrote:How so?Blindmelon wrote:Confirms that USC belongs with BU/BC/Fordham more than it does the UCLA/Vand group.romothesavior wrote:I posted this in the other thread, but I'll add it here as well:
The spreadsheet of "50-500+ and fed clerkships" and the breakdown of placement by firm sizes seems to confirm so much of the "TLS groupthink" or "hivemind" or whatever you want to call it regarding firm placement for T15-30 schools.
-Vandy/USC/UCLA/UT are in a class below the T14, but clearly higher than the T20.
-BU/BC/Fordham are slightly below this group, but above the "Midwest T20s" in firm placement.
-ND, Illinois, and WUSTL are truly peers, as much as any schools could be. Every reliable job stat I have ever seen has them lumped closely together.
-UMN and Iowa are a step below WUSTL/ND/Illinois.
-Indiana, Wisconsin, Arizona State, and Washington are T30 in in name only.
Though I'd be interested to see how these compare to future numbers before making definitive conclusions, they seem to align with how I've always thought of these schools relative to one another.
USC is definitely closer to F/BC/BU than to UCLA/Vand.... if you look at 250+ people firms its less so, but I also don't think that being a 250+ firm automatically makes it a more desirable job or less competitive.
The tab with academia/PI, etc. is a little less accurate methinks given that the "academia" category can often be BS.
- romothesavior
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Yeah I'm not just looking at the 50+ number, I am sorta looking at all the data points and drawing conclusions. You could make the case that USC belongs with BU/BC, but I think it is more of a UCLA/UT/Vandy peer.
Let's put it this way though... when you take into account geography, the BU/BC dynamic is almost identical to the USC/UCLA dynamic. They are schools in the same city, great in their home market, and solid elsewhere. It would be rare to really have to differentiate between USC/UCLA vs. BU/BC since they are so far apart and place primarily into different markets, so I suppose it doesn't matter which group you lump USC/UCLA in with.
Let's put it this way though... when you take into account geography, the BU/BC dynamic is almost identical to the USC/UCLA dynamic. They are schools in the same city, great in their home market, and solid elsewhere. It would be rare to really have to differentiate between USC/UCLA vs. BU/BC since they are so far apart and place primarily into different markets, so I suppose it doesn't matter which group you lump USC/UCLA in with.
- Julio_El_Chavo
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
i have no idea why anyone would go to Hastingsdrmguy wrote:I didn't really look over all the data until now.
Holy crap Hastings
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
I agree. The little groupings don't really matter at all. I just thought it was odd that the above poster made his/her conclusion based on one single data point that didn't even seem to justify the conclusion that they were making because USC and Texas were essentially identical in that regard (.04% difference).romothesavior wrote:Yeah I'm not just looking at the 50+ number, I am sorta looking at all the data points and drawing conclusions. You could make the case that USC belongs with BU/BC, but I think it is more of a UCLA/UT/Vandy peer.
Let's put it this way though... when you take into account geography, the BU/BC dynamic is almost identical to the USC/UCLA dynamic. They are schools in the same city, great in their home market, and solid elsewhere. It would be rare to really have to differentiate between USC/UCLA vs. BU/BC since they are so far apart and place primarily into different markets, so I suppose it doesn't matter which group you lump USC/UCLA in with.
- Blindmelon
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Its a data point, but likely the most useful out of the bunch - the importance of NLJ250 % or people at 250+ size firms is vastly overrated on this site. But ya'll right that those schools don't compete anyway so its a moot point.chimp wrote:I agree. The little groupings don't really matter at all. I just thought it was odd that the above poster made his/her conclusion based on one single data point that didn't even seem to justify the conclusion that they were making because USC and Texas were essentially identical in that regard (.04% difference).romothesavior wrote:Yeah I'm not just looking at the 50+ number, I am sorta looking at all the data points and drawing conclusions. You could make the case that USC belongs with BU/BC, but I think it is more of a UCLA/UT/Vandy peer.
Let's put it this way though... when you take into account geography, the BU/BC dynamic is almost identical to the USC/UCLA dynamic. They are schools in the same city, great in their home market, and solid elsewhere. It would be rare to really have to differentiate between USC/UCLA vs. BU/BC since they are so far apart and place primarily into different markets, so I suppose it doesn't matter which group you lump USC/UCLA in with.
- drmguy
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Yeppaulshortys10 wrote:this is data for the 2010 class right?
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
I don't think academia should be lumped in with anything. Everywhere that reports salaries for academia jobs has them pegged at the 50-60k range (when they aren't law school funded ones). I'm thinking it's something like teacher at community college? Fuck if I know.
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
I bet you some are law librarians, they all start around there.bk187 wrote:I don't think academia should be lumped in with anything. Everywhere that reports salaries for academia jobs has them pegged at the 50-60k range (when they aren't law school funded ones). I'm thinking it's something like teacher at community college? Fuck if I know.
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
That's possible. So maybe they are decent jobs? No clue but because of salary I lean towards not adding them in.JamesChapman23 wrote:I bet you some are law librarians, they all start around there.bk187 wrote:I don't think academia should be lumped in with anything. Everywhere that reports salaries for academia jobs has them pegged at the 50-60k range (when they aren't law school funded ones). I'm thinking it's something like teacher at community college? Fuck if I know.
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
This thread should be stickied in supplement to the 2009 employment Graphs, esp if someone were to graph these info by rank.
As a side note, we all know this is for 2010 so thats a pretty long time ago, ppl did OCI in like 2008. So Im curious based on OCI results for class of 2013, does anyone think class of 2013 stats would mirror 2010 employments stats or closer to 2009 or perhaps closer to 2011?
How about guesses for Class of 2014 or 2015? Will they be similar to class of 2009?
As a side note, we all know this is for 2010 so thats a pretty long time ago, ppl did OCI in like 2008. So Im curious based on OCI results for class of 2013, does anyone think class of 2013 stats would mirror 2010 employments stats or closer to 2009 or perhaps closer to 2011?
How about guesses for Class of 2014 or 2015? Will they be similar to class of 2009?
- Gail
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
what I'd really like to know is what the salary ranges for these are. I guess there's no way to find that out.
i consider 50k - 60k to be a good job.
i consider 50k - 60k to be a good job.
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- Gail
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Class of 2013 will be better than 2011, but worse than 2010. This is sunny compared to what we'll be entering.splittinghairs wrote:This thread should be stickied in supplement to the 2009 employment Graphs, esp if someone were to graph these info by rank.
As a side note, we all know this is for 2010 so thats a pretty long time ago, ppl did OCI in like 2008. So Im curious based on OCI results for class of 2013, does anyone think class of 2013 stats would mirror 2010 employments stats or closer to 2009 or perhaps closer to 2011?
How about guesses for Class of 2014 or 2015? Will they be similar to class of 2009?
- romothesavior
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Based on very rough estimates for WUSTL, I think we will be better than c/o 2011, nowhere near c/o 2008 or 2009.splittinghairs wrote:This thread should be stickied in supplement to the 2009 employment Graphs, esp if someone were to graph these info by rank.
As a side note, we all know this is for 2010 so thats a pretty long time ago, ppl did OCI in like 2008. So Im curious based on OCI results for class of 2013, does anyone think class of 2013 stats would mirror 2010 employments stats or closer to 2009 or perhaps closer to 2011?
How about guesses for Class of 2014 or 2015? Will they be similar to class of 2009?
I think we'll be around the same as the data you see here (c/o 2010) or maybe a bit worse. I imagine other schools will be similar.
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
Generally I think I agree. But coming out of law school that kind of job doesn't pay off sticker price debt. And I don't think that a job that pays that should be lumped in with jobs that pay can be pay off sticker price debt in 10 years or less either by large salary (big firms) or PSLF (PI/gov).Gail wrote:i consider 50k - 60k to be a good job.
- Gail
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Re: Detailed Employment Statistics Google Doc
There are a lot of students who take big scholarships over better employment prospects. if 60% are still getting a good job of 50-60k that is still a pretty good deal.bk187 wrote:Generally I think I agree. But coming out of law school that kind of job doesn't pay off sticker price debt. And I don't think that a job that pays that should be lumped in with jobs that pay can be pay off sticker price debt in 10 years or less either by large salary (big firms) or PSLF (PI/gov).Gail wrote:i consider 50k - 60k to be a good job.
The issue comes in with 35-40k.
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