Mid-level schools with national appeal? Forum
- kurama20
- Posts: 538
- Joined: Thu May 24, 2007 5:04 pm
- reasonable_man
- Posts: 2194
- Joined: Thu Feb 12, 2009 5:41 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
There are a few states that have reciprocal admission, but there really isn't much need for it. Pick one State you really want to practice in and focus on that. You can take a second state at the same time and that will be more than enough.sibley wrote:reasonable manbutt, do you know which states grant admission to the bar and then allow you to practice in a few other states?
I was at a wedding yesterday and as both bride and groom were graduates of my university, and groom was a member of jewfrat, I had a very lovely time schmoozing with law students (who told me this was the case). They informed me of this. Now I want to see about strategizing.
-
- Posts: 501
- Joined: Thu Oct 15, 2009 12:03 am
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
kurama20 wrote:Emory

- Helmholtz
- Posts: 4128
- Joined: Wed Sep 17, 2008 1:48 pm
- RVP11
- Posts: 2774
- Joined: Tue Nov 06, 2007 6:32 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
Too regional.Helmholtz wrote:UVA
Chicago.
Want to continue reading?
Register now to search topics and post comments!
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
- Luis Gomez
- Posts: 429
- Joined: Sat Sep 19, 2009 11:22 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
I hope so. Wake Forest has become my top choice despite being admitted to higher ranked schools.
j.wellington wrote:Thanks for the replies. I think I'm using the wrong terminology when I refer to "Tier 1" schools. I suppose I meant schools out of the top 25 but within the top 75 – decent schools that I don't have to pray to get into with my numbers.
I've read that Wake Forest has fairly broad appeal and doesn't seem to be too outside my range.
Last edited by Luis Gomez on Sun Jan 03, 2010 8:08 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- Kohinoor
- Posts: 2641
- Joined: Sat Oct 25, 2008 5:51 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
you best be jokingHelmholtz wrote:UVA
- vanwinkle
- Posts: 8953
- Joined: Sun Dec 21, 2008 3:02 am
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
Helmholtz wrote:UVA

-
- Posts: 297
- Joined: Fri May 01, 2009 1:32 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
Apply ambitiously and cast a wide net. From your acceptances, select the best school factoring in location, reputation and, most importantly, cost!
It will not matter what school you went too once you have landed a full time legal job. You may not like the market, but you will be buried so deep underneath case law that you will never see the city you work in during day light.
After a few years of blood, sweat and tears, you will have more mobility.
If you cannot get into T14, this path is your only chance.
It will not matter what school you went too once you have landed a full time legal job. You may not like the market, but you will be buried so deep underneath case law that you will never see the city you work in during day light.
After a few years of blood, sweat and tears, you will have more mobility.
If you cannot get into T14, this path is your only chance.
-
- Posts: 1500
- Joined: Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:39 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
This was a much better (i.e., likely to incite reaction) flame than the Emory post someone threw out earlier. No one on TLS even goes to Emory.Kohinoor wrote:you best be jokingHelmholtz wrote:UVA
- Cara
- Posts: 60
- Joined: Fri Feb 13, 2009 9:07 am
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
Schools ranked 15-25ish are about as low as you can go and still expect some prospect of national placement based on the reputation of the school, especially ITE.
-
- Posts: 103
- Joined: Mon Dec 28, 2009 3:44 am
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
A few things to keep in mind about school selection:
1. Only lawyers and their lawyer cronies truly know a good law school from a moderately good law school.
2. If you work as in house counsel for a large corporation it is more important to go to a nationally recognized "good school" in the general sense than to go to a top law school. Particularly if the other senior executives run in the same alumni circles.
Lastly, Notre Dame is the absolute top national choice below tier-14 and I can provide a few anecdotal reasons why:
1. Notre Dame is the third most recognized university in the world. (by name recognition) Yale and Harvard being the only two better known to the masses.
2. 1 billion people happen to be Catholic and those people generally look favorably upon ND grads wherever they roam. (regardless of the person's individual faith)
3. Those on the really inside track that know the nitty-gritty of what schools are doing know that ND ranks as one of the highest global institutions in the area of business and legal ethics. If you intend to be an attorney that cleans up very ugly situations having an educational background that is strong on ethics provides some reassurance to you employer/client.
4. Football. As bizarre and seemingly irrelevant as that sounds, the fact that ND is not in a regional conference (e.g. big-10, big-east, pac-10) means that Notre Dame is a household name all over the country. This silly little game allows in roads for many levels of respected competition from coast to coast that seems to have a positive effect on job prospects throughout the country.
1. Only lawyers and their lawyer cronies truly know a good law school from a moderately good law school.
2. If you work as in house counsel for a large corporation it is more important to go to a nationally recognized "good school" in the general sense than to go to a top law school. Particularly if the other senior executives run in the same alumni circles.
Lastly, Notre Dame is the absolute top national choice below tier-14 and I can provide a few anecdotal reasons why:
1. Notre Dame is the third most recognized university in the world. (by name recognition) Yale and Harvard being the only two better known to the masses.
2. 1 billion people happen to be Catholic and those people generally look favorably upon ND grads wherever they roam. (regardless of the person's individual faith)
3. Those on the really inside track that know the nitty-gritty of what schools are doing know that ND ranks as one of the highest global institutions in the area of business and legal ethics. If you intend to be an attorney that cleans up very ugly situations having an educational background that is strong on ethics provides some reassurance to you employer/client.
4. Football. As bizarre and seemingly irrelevant as that sounds, the fact that ND is not in a regional conference (e.g. big-10, big-east, pac-10) means that Notre Dame is a household name all over the country. This silly little game allows in roads for many levels of respected competition from coast to coast that seems to have a positive effect on job prospects throughout the country.
-
- Posts: 1500
- Joined: Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:39 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
I would bet money this isn't true; at the very least people know Oxford and Cambridge more, and I'd bet domestically they know Princeton and Stanford more as well.rookhawk wrote:1. Notre Dame is the third most recognized university in the world. (by name recognition) Yale and Harvard being the only two better known to the masses.
People (non-Catholic TLSers) brush this shit off, but it's true. Smart, rich, well-positioned Catholics who should be too rational to have preferences like this will favor the Domers over similarly (or more)-qualified people. I can't vouch for law per se, but I have seen it in both business and (non-legal) academia.rookhawk wrote:2. 1 billion people happen to be Catholic and those people generally look favorably upon ND grads wherever they roam. (regardless of the person's individual faith)
I don't know if this is actually true in general (it doesn't seem like it would be), but the new CEO of Bank of America (NDLS alum) is a definite beneficiary of this concept.rookhawk wrote:3. Those on the really inside track that know the nitty-gritty of what schools are doing know that ND ranks as one of the highest global institutions in the area of business and legal ethics. If you intend to be an attorney that cleans up very ugly situations having an educational background that is strong on ethics provides some reassurance to you employer/client.
Register now!
Resources to assist law school applicants, students & graduates.
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login
-
- Posts: 103
- Joined: Mon Dec 28, 2009 3:44 am
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
A quick response to the skeptic about "ND being a world leader in ethics".
When I was at ND for my first ethics class they brought in Chairman Emeritus of the University, Father Ted Hesburgh. If you are unfamiliar with "Father Ted's" resume I'll give a few highlights to illustrate his qualifications to teach ethics. Co-Author of the 1964 civil rights amendment. Advisor to several US presidents. Marched with Dr. King when it was VERY unfashionable to do so in many Catholic, blue-collar democrat circles. (remember in 1964 Republicans were the majority in favor of civil rights and the Catholic democrats were putting up some resistance...speaks volume of ND 's character that they fight for what is right, not what is popular with a constituency) Ted also holds the Guiness world record for the most honorary degrees of anyone in human history.
So when I heard about putting "ethics into action" I had to hand it to ND, they had what it takes to make the grade. The other professors were very laudable as well and people like Fr. Ollie Williams (heavily involved in international slave labor issues), Dr. Joe Holt, esq., and others all come to mind.
My MBA from ND was one of the greatest highlights of my adult life and I can't say enough good things about the school. They took a chance on me and let me into a circle of excellence that no one would have thought possible when I was a child.
I'd further that the joint JD/MBA program at ND is a double win because you're getting top-25 in both programs in only three years.
Regards,
Rookhawk
-Disclaimers: ND Grad
-Not Catholic
-Not from Indiana
-I work nationally
-While not an attorney, I have managed legal issues and legal staff professionally
When I was at ND for my first ethics class they brought in Chairman Emeritus of the University, Father Ted Hesburgh. If you are unfamiliar with "Father Ted's" resume I'll give a few highlights to illustrate his qualifications to teach ethics. Co-Author of the 1964 civil rights amendment. Advisor to several US presidents. Marched with Dr. King when it was VERY unfashionable to do so in many Catholic, blue-collar democrat circles. (remember in 1964 Republicans were the majority in favor of civil rights and the Catholic democrats were putting up some resistance...speaks volume of ND 's character that they fight for what is right, not what is popular with a constituency) Ted also holds the Guiness world record for the most honorary degrees of anyone in human history.
So when I heard about putting "ethics into action" I had to hand it to ND, they had what it takes to make the grade. The other professors were very laudable as well and people like Fr. Ollie Williams (heavily involved in international slave labor issues), Dr. Joe Holt, esq., and others all come to mind.
My MBA from ND was one of the greatest highlights of my adult life and I can't say enough good things about the school. They took a chance on me and let me into a circle of excellence that no one would have thought possible when I was a child.
I'd further that the joint JD/MBA program at ND is a double win because you're getting top-25 in both programs in only three years.
Regards,
Rookhawk
-Disclaimers: ND Grad
-Not Catholic
-Not from Indiana
-I work nationally
-While not an attorney, I have managed legal issues and legal staff professionally
-
- Posts: 530
- Joined: Wed Sep 30, 2009 10:21 am
-
- Posts: 1500
- Joined: Fri Nov 06, 2009 11:39 pm
Re: Mid-level schools with national appeal?
Why thank you for the props!jayzon wrote:Congratulations, new guy; you are rapidly moving up the ranks of solid posters.
Let me just add that I conducted this peer-reviewed study on lay prestige (scholarly publication pending), and while ND fared very well (it had the best ratio of lay prestige ranking to USNWR ranking of all schools... UChicago was far-and-away the worst), it was still typically toward the bottom of the top 10.
Also, not to be one of those disrespectful-to-all-history-and-tradition type young people, but everyone in my generation thinks ND's football team kinda sucks.
Once again though, the OP was about TIER 2 schools with national reach (ND is a T25), and I still go with Tulane and UF. Maybe Case Western? (They're a good overall university, so if we're going off that concept...)
Yes, I know Hesburgh, and I know the school's commitment to service/ethics, I just doubt the impact of that rep on entry-level attorney hiring (anywhere). I do think it can play a significant role on your attractiveness as an applicant to highly visible (read: experienced) leadership positions, as was the case with the BoA CEO I noted.rookhawk wrote:A quick response to the skeptic about "ND being a world leader in ethics".
When I was at ND for my first ethics class they brought in Chairman Emeritus of the University, Father Ted Hesburgh. If you are unfamiliar with "Father Ted's" resume I'll give a few highlights to illustrate his qualifications to teach ethics. Co-Author of the 1964 civil rights amendment. Advisor to several US presidents. Marched with Dr. King when it was VERY unfashionable to do so in many Catholic, blue-collar democrat circles. (remember in 1964 Republicans were the majority in favor of civil rights and the Catholic democrats were putting up some resistance...speaks volume of ND 's character that they fight for what is right, not what is popular with a constituency) Ted also holds the Guiness world record for the most honorary degrees of anyone in human history.
So when I heard about putting "ethics into action" I had to hand it to ND, they had what it takes to make the grade. The other professors were very laudable as well and people like Fr. Ollie Williams (heavily involved in international slave labor issues), Dr. Joe Holt, esq., and others all come to mind.
Edit: I think even ND would tell you that they emphasize ethics b/c they believe it's important in and of itself, not for any perceived marketability.
Get unlimited access to all forums and topics
Register now!
I'm pretty sure I told you it's FREE...
Already a member? Login