Emory Woodruff Scholarship v. Lower T-14
Posted: Sat Mar 30, 2013 4:07 pm
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Which lower T14? What are your career goals if not biglaw?crystalball wrote:Given this information, do you think that taking the Woodruff or attending a lower t-14 school (10-14) at scholarships ranging from $0-30k is the better decision?
crystalball wrote:- I am not certain of what market I want to work in (and am not at all opposed to staying in the Southeast), but would like to keep as many open as possible
Emory will be more restrictive in terms of location but getting a full tuition scholarship + stipend may balance that out. The real question is whether you think the increase in degree portability from a T14 is worth 200k in debt (+ interest). I personally do not think that's the case since you'd be happy in Atlanta/SE.crystalball wrote:- I have ties to Atlanta and like Atlanta but do not know 100% yet that I want to spend the rest of my life there (hence wanting to keep other markets open)
Academia (assuming you mean legal academia) will be nearly impossible from Emory and only marginally less so from a lower T14. I would just put academia out of your mind altogether.crystalball wrote:- I might be interested in academia
There will be almost no difference between Emory and a lower T14 in this regard.crystalball wrote:- I want to attend a school where I can learn as much from my peers as my professors, so an intellectual classroom environment is important
I'm not sure that the line on your resume will meaningfully sort you from everyone else. It looks like you're an Emory student: what are you doing? How was the job hunt there?ze2151 wrote:named fellowships are where it's at if you can get them. from day one, you have a leg up on everyone in the building, and it can never be taken away from you. regardless of how you do on arbitrary exams (and most people in the real world are aware of how arbitrary exams are, even if biglaw still uses them as a sorting mechanism), you will have a line on your resume that separates you from everybody else. no-brainer.
withdraw so they can give me the woodruff. Or attend and we can be roommates.crystalball wrote:Emory is my undergraduate alma mater so I have lived there.BigZuck wrote:If you haven't lived in a place then you don't really have ties there as far as firms are concerned, at least according to this site.
pm'dhibiki wrote:
I'm not sure that the line on your resume will meaningfully sort you from everyone else. It looks like you're an Emory student: what are you doing? How was the job hunt there?
Can you please PM me with that information as well?ze2151 wrote:pm'dhibiki wrote:
I'm not sure that the line on your resume will meaningfully sort you from everyone else. It looks like you're an Emory student: what are you doing? How was the job hunt there?
Then definitely do Emory bro. No question in my opinion. Enjoy your Woody.crystalball wrote:Emory is my undergraduate alma mater so I have lived there.BigZuck wrote:If you haven't lived in a place then you don't really have ties there as far as firms are concerned, at least according to this site.
Very helpful. I'm surprised that no T14 is offering you more than $10K per year. I don't know the average numbers profile of Woodruff recipients, but I thought the stats were up there. I doubt Michigan or GULC would negotiate with a Woodruff offer, but I suppose you could try. As it stands, Emory for only COL sounds like the more attractive option. Others may differ, but paying either sticker or near sticker at Michigan or GULC is a scary thought to me.crystalball wrote:Thanks for your input, everyone. I really appreciate it. In response to your questions:
Which lower T14 and what exact amount of merit aid?
Michigan and Georgetown and also considering Vanderbilt and Texas
Are those T14 scholarships $30K per year or in total?
Total
Would you be living on your own in Atlanta?
Yes
Are there any schools where your app is still under review? If so, which ones?
Yes: NYU, Columbia, Northwestern, Cornell
What are your career goals if not biglaw?
Unsure. Maybe employment or family law. Still finding it hard to let go of the idea of producing legal scholarship or teaching someday. Call me crazy, but I'll do what I can to still go for it...
Since you're from the South, is that lower T14 Duke?
I’m actually not from the South, I just have ties there. I also have ties in the North.
First things first, Emory cannot require you to withdraw pending applications as a condition of accepting the Woodruff, regardless of what they say. They can require you to withdraw apps from schools to which you've been accepted, but that's it. See: http://blogs.law.yale.edu/blogs/admissi ... rency.aspx.crystalball wrote:I only applied to a few t-14 schools because I care more about programs compatible with my interests than rankings, at least to an extent (attracted to GULC's plan B curriculum and Michigan's Program in Race, Law & History). While my numbers are pretty solid, there's no real indication of need anywhere on my application and it is my personal opinion that my resume speaks much more to my abilities than my numbers. Unfortunately, US News Rankings doesn't take any "soft" factors into account and thus extremely generous scholarship offers from t-14 schools have not been coming in droves...Ti Malice wrote:Very helpful. I'm surprised that no T14 is offering you more than $10K per year. I don't know the average numbers profile of Woodruff recipients, but I thought the stats were up there. I doubt Michigan or GULC would negotiate with a Woodruff offer, but I suppose you could try. As it stands, Emory for only COL sounds like the more attractive option. Others may differ, but paying either sticker or near sticker at Michigan or GULC is a scary thought to me.crystalball wrote:Thanks for your input, everyone. I really appreciate it. In response to your questions:
Which lower T14 and what exact amount of merit aid?
Michigan and Georgetown and also considering Vanderbilt and Texas
Are those T14 scholarships $30K per year or in total?
Total
Would you be living on your own in Atlanta?
Yes
Are there any schools where your app is still under review? If so, which ones?
Yes: NYU, Columbia, Northwestern, Cornell
What are your career goals if not biglaw?
Unsure. Maybe employment or family law. Still finding it hard to let go of the idea of producing legal scholarship or teaching someday. Call me crazy, but I'll do what I can to still go for it...
Since you're from the South, is that lower T14 Duke?
I’m actually not from the South, I just have ties there. I also have ties in the North.
If you accept the Woodruff, are you required to withdraw from the schools where you've already been accepted?
And yes, I would be required to withdraw all decisions (acceptances and wait lists) as well as pending applications.
Michigan might not be a lower T14 but they sure place worse than one AMIRITE!?!abl wrote:Michigan's not exactly a lower T-14, and probable gives you your only realistic shot at being a law professor out of the bunch you've named (note: realistic =/ likely). So if that's your dream job and you're willing to risk it, go to Michigan. If you think you'd be happy doing employment/family law -- which to my knowledge are not particularly competitive and don't pay particularly well -- and are ok giving up the law prof dreams, go to Emory. If you go to Michigan and don't do well enough to have a shot at being a law prof (probably around top 10% to have a shot), which as you can imagine is not easy at Michigan), you'll probably be in too much debt to employment/family law. I'd forget about Georgetown, Vanderbilt, Texas, Cornell (if admitted), and maybe Northwestern (if admitted) without substantial finaid. My sense is that you're not so desperate to academia that gambling on Michigan would make much sense, so I'd go to Emory.*
*It's worth finding out if Michigan's LRAP covers employment/family law. If so, this weights the equation back towards Michigan in my book. Ditto for any of the other above schools that I recommended against. If LRAP covers employment/fam law, any of them could be a good (probably better than Emory) option.