Iowa Law or Minnesota Forum
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Iowa Law or Minnesota
I want to eventually end up in Big Law. I am wait listed for Notre Dame and BU. But for now I have been accepted into Minnesota and Iowa. Which is better?
- lymenheimer
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- Clemenceau
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
Both send less than 25% of graduates to biglaw. Don't do it.
- cron1834
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
These are almost carbon-copy peer schools. They place in different states. The LARGE majority of grads at each cannot get biglaw.
I don't think you've thought this thing through very well dude.
I don't think you've thought this thing through very well dude.
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
gotta retake for big law bro
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
You likely won't get Big Law from either school. If you want Big Law, you need to retake the LSAT.
- mornincounselor
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
The reason these stats are so important (and you need to familiarize yourself with them see: lstscoreports.com) is because big law is not generally something you can stumble into after a few years of doing something else. Normally, you have one shot at BL and that is right out of school (or conversely right out of a federal clerkship -- another result which neither of the listed schools place very well into).
So if you go to school with a 15% shot at BL (and again the actual number for non-diverse students without big law connections and without patent bar eligibility is probably quite a bit smaller) this is often your only shot. So you really ought to sit out and study better for the LSAT (tons of guides and resources over in the LSAT Prep forum) so you can go to a school where you have a better opportunity to accomplish your goals.
So if you go to school with a 15% shot at BL (and again the actual number for non-diverse students without big law connections and without patent bar eligibility is probably quite a bit smaller) this is often your only shot. So you really ought to sit out and study better for the LSAT (tons of guides and resources over in the LSAT Prep forum) so you can go to a school where you have a better opportunity to accomplish your goals.
- Mack.Hambleton
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
dont go to ND or BU if you want biglaw either. these are all regional schools in different states
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
I can't speak about Iowa. (I'm sure it's great.) But as a current U of Minnesota student, I will say that the students and the professors here are top-notch. Absolutely wonderful. I wrote more about UMN in another thread. See http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/p ... &p=9342787. But what are you looking for in a school? Feel free to PM directly if you have any other questions about the school.Plasticflowers wrote:I want to eventually end up in Big Law. I am wait listed for Notre Dame and BU. But for now I have been accepted into Minnesota and Iowa. Which is better?
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
Professors will not service your debt.randomstudent wrote:I can't speak about Iowa. (I'm sure it's great.) But as a current U of Minnesota student, I will say that the students and the professors here are top-notch. Absolutely wonderful. I wrote more about UMN in another thread. See http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/p ... &p=9342787. But what are you looking for in a school? Feel free to PM directly if you have any other questions about the school.Plasticflowers wrote:I want to eventually end up in Big Law. I am wait listed for Notre Dame and BU. But for now I have been accepted into Minnesota and Iowa. Which is better?
- cavalier1138
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
But maybe the admissions office will if you do some PR work for them on the side?Foghornleghorn wrote:Professors will not service your debt.randomstudent wrote:I can't speak about Iowa. (I'm sure it's great.) But as a current U of Minnesota student, I will say that the students and the professors here are top-notch. Absolutely wonderful. I wrote more about UMN in another thread. See http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/p ... &p=9342787. But what are you looking for in a school? Feel free to PM directly if you have any other questions about the school.Plasticflowers wrote:I want to eventually end up in Big Law. I am wait listed for Notre Dame and BU. But for now I have been accepted into Minnesota and Iowa. Which is better?
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
For the record, I don't work for Admissions and never have. And yes, having great professors will not pay off your debt. But I'd like to think at least some of us go to law school to learn? If you don't care about the quality of the professors where you go to law school, ignore my comment.
But you all are right, of course, that debt is an important consideration. If you don't get a good scholarship from Iowa or Minnesota, or you're deadset on BigLaw, you can always consider retaking the LSAT.
But you all are right, of course, that debt is an important consideration. If you don't get a good scholarship from Iowa or Minnesota, or you're deadset on BigLaw, you can always consider retaking the LSAT.
- Mullens
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
But here's the thing, every top law school has excellent professors. Hell, even some bad law school have really great professors. And you should not go to law school to learn, you should go to law school to get gainful employment. It is a professional school and costs up to $300,000. You don't go "for the experience" or some other crock. Sure you should learn while in law school, but a legal education is going to be similar at every school. The main difference is employment outcomes and neither Minnesota nor Iowa are likely to get this poster their desired employment outcome.randomstudent wrote:For the record, I don't work for Admissions and never have. And yes, having great professors will not pay off your debt. But I'd like to think at least some of us go to law school to learn? If you don't care about the quality of the professors where you go to law school, ignore my comment.
But you all are right, of course, that debt is an important consideration. If you don't get a good scholarship from Iowa or Minnesota, or you're deadset on BigLaw, you can always consider retaking the LSAT.
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
Iowa, the choice of DaRascal
- cron1834
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
Whatever happened to him? Was any of that real?haus wrote:Iowa, the choice of DaRascal
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
That's fair. There are two questions here:Mullens wrote:But here's the thing, every top law school has excellent professors. Hell, even some bad law school have really great professors. And you should not go to law school to learn, you should go to law school to get gainful employment. It is a professional school and costs up to $300,000. You don't go "for the experience" or some other crock. Sure you should learn while in law school, but a legal education is going to be similar at every school. The main difference is employment outcomes and neither Minnesota nor Iowa are likely to get this poster their desired employment outcome.randomstudent wrote:For the record, I don't work for Admissions and never have. And yes, having great professors will not pay off your debt. But I'd like to think at least some of us go to law school to learn? If you don't care about the quality of the professors where you go to law school, ignore my comment.
But you all are right, of course, that debt is an important consideration. If you don't get a good scholarship from Iowa or Minnesota, or you're deadset on BigLaw, you can always consider retaking the LSAT.
1. If the poster is just trying to decide between two comparable schools like Iowa and Minnesota, then I wouldn't say the professors (or the "experience") s/he will have in law school is completely meaningless. Having worked four+ years in the legal field (everything from family law to big law), I'll readily concede that much of legal practice is learned on the job and not from law school. But there are still a few professors that stand out as having better prepared me for practice than others. And a pre-law advisor from Virginia once told me that there was some study that ranked Minnesota's faculty as one of the top 3 in the country. (I don't know if that was true or not.)
2. If, on the other hand, the question is whether the poster should go to law school this year (or retake the LSAT), then, like you pointed out, his or her scholarship offer and the school's tuition / employment rates are more important than the "experience" that s/he will get at law school. For the purpose of this question, the original poster can probably ignore my first comment. My apologies if my first reply came across as a bit salty.
Last edited by randomstudent on Sat May 14, 2016 7:39 pm, edited 2 times in total.
- cavalier1138
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
I think you're still missing the point. Every school at the top level has excellent professors. So while the quality of the teachers is certainly important in a school, it's not a deciding factor here. And since every teacher has a different style, a 0L can't possibly know whether or not they're going to mesh well with every teacher at a particular school.randomstudent wrote:That's fair. I've worked four+ years in the legal field (everything from family law to BigLaw), and I don't agree that the quality of your professors in law school is meaningless. But I don't mean to minimize or disagree with what every else has said about debt and employment rates.Mullens wrote:But here's the thing, every top law school has excellent professors. Hell, even some bad law school have really great professors. And you should not go to law school to learn, you should go to law school to get gainful employment. It is a professional school and costs up to $300,000. You don't go "for the experience" or some other crock. Sure you should learn while in law school, but a legal education is going to be similar at every school. The main difference is employment outcomes and neither Minnesota nor Iowa are likely to get this poster their desired employment outcome.randomstudent wrote:For the record, I don't work for Admissions and never have. And yes, having great professors will not pay off your debt. But I'd like to think at least some of us go to law school to learn? If you don't care about the quality of the professors where you go to law school, ignore my comment.
But you all are right, of course, that debt is an important consideration. If you don't get a good scholarship from Iowa or Minnesota, or you're deadset on BigLaw, you can always consider retaking the LSAT.
Now, if there are faculty members who happen to also be able to enhance your potential work opportunities after school, that's a different story. Because being really great at helping you understand constitutional law isn't nearly as helpful as having contacts in the ACLU.
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
Every school at the top level has excellent professors. Sure. That's not to say that some schools don't have better professors than others, or that the culture of a law school is meaningless . . . if the original poster is already dead set on going to law school this year. Anyways, just my two cents about my experience at Minnesota. If others disagree on its relevance, that's fine.cavalier1138 wrote:I think you're still missing the point. Every school at the top level has excellent professors. So while the quality of the teachers is certainly important in a school, it's not a deciding factor here. And since every teacher has a different style, a 0L can't possibly know whether or not they're going to mesh well with every teacher at a particular school.
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
I don't discount your experience. I discount its relevance to OP who has said biglaw or bust and the probability of that outcome given OP's options
- kellyfrost
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
In terms of which school would provide the best place to live, Iowa, hands down.
Is this heaven? No, it's Iowa.
Is this heaven? No, it's Iowa.
Last edited by kellyfrost on Sat Jan 27, 2018 3:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Pomeranian
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
If you're looking at Big 10 schools, why not U of Illinois? Better shot at big law than Iowa or Minnesota
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
He went to Seton Hall.cron1834 wrote:Whatever happened to him? Was any of that real?haus wrote:Iowa, the choice of DaRascal
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Re: Iowa Law or Minnesota
It appears that you are right, I do think at one point he claimed to be in route to Iowa on a full ride, but seems that the reference to Seton Hall came later.Rigo wrote:He went to Seton Hall.cron1834 wrote:Whatever happened to him? Was any of that real?haus wrote:Iowa, the choice of DaRascal
http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/v ... e&start=50
Although DaRascal postings at times have a sense of disconnection from reality.
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