Study: 70% of YLS students have some form of mental illness
Posted: Tue Dec 09, 2014 12:42 pm
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jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
I will say, in response to this, higher intelligence correlates very strongly with higher rates of mental illness. So it is likely that YLS has a higher rate of mental illness than the average school, since it is full of highly intelligent people, but that may be less due to the stress/workload of YLS and more due to the fact that the population of students who attend YLS are simply already more at risk for mental illness.jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
Assume literally everyone who didn't fill out the survey had no mental health issue. You're still getting ~30%+. The issue vs. illness is a big deal of course (I agree the title's super clickbaity for no reason.)jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
Definitely skimmed this, but I'm going to assume that anxiety and depression were included, since they're generally considered a mental health issue. I also didn't see any indication of whether these issues needed to be severe to be considered. Likely, minor issues were considered as challenges. Mental health issues are fairly common. I don't see this as that surprising.Elston Gunn wrote:Assume literally everyone who didn't fill out the survey had no mental health issue. You're still getting ~30%+. The issue vs. illness is a big deal of course (I agree the title's super clickbaity for no reason.)jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
I hardly think the point is that the YLS experience is especially bad, just that law school is shitty and they (YLS in particular maybe) do a shitty job of helping.
Dude, this article was emailed to me by a coworker with the message "No one likes savants and aspies."FairchildFLT wrote:So this article is saying 100% of YLS students are aspies 60% of the time? Sex panther...
But it's only seventy percent of YLS students who participated in the study, not seventy percent of YLS students in general. All I was trying to suggest was this figure means nothing without knowing how many people actually participated in the survey--maybe they only surveyed 10 people. Or 20. Or 300. YLS could certainly have much more than 30% of its student population characterized as mentally healthy.Elston Gunn wrote:Assume literally everyone who didn't fill out the survey had no mental health issue. You're still getting ~30%+. The issue vs. illness is a big deal of course (I agree the title's super clickbaity for no reason.)jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
I hardly think the point is that the YLS experience is especially bad, just that law school is shitty and they (YLS in particular maybe) do a shitty job of helping.
Outed as not having read the fucking article.jrc223 wrote:But it's only seventy percent of YLS students who participated in the study, not seventy percent of YLS students in general. All I was trying to suggest was this figure means nothing without knowing how many people actually participated in the survey--maybe they only surveyed 10 people. Or 20. Or 300. YLS could certainly have much more than 30% of its student population characterized as mentally healthy.Elston Gunn wrote:Assume literally everyone who didn't fill out the survey had no mental health issue. You're still getting ~30%+. The issue vs. illness is a big deal of course (I agree the title's super clickbaity for no reason.)jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
I hardly think the point is that the YLS experience is especially bad, just that law school is shitty and they (YLS in particular maybe) do a shitty job of helping.
I agree with you otherwise, though.
Second Paragraph of The Fucking Article wrote:The report, which was released Monday afternoon, is the first of its kind at the law school. Titled “Falling Through the Cracks,” it consisted of an electronic survey sent out to all YLS students. Out of YLS’s student body of approximately 650 students, 296 responded.
Ah, my mistake. I did skim the article this morning, but that obviously didn't stick. To Elston Gunn's earlier point, though, if those who did not respond to the survey were assumed to have no mental issues, in addition to those who did fill out the survey and identified as not having a mental issue, then approximately 68% of YLS students would not be considered mentally ill.ymmv wrote:Outed as not having read the fucking article.jrc223 wrote:But it's only seventy percent of YLS students who participated in the study, not seventy percent of YLS students in general. All I was trying to suggest was this figure means nothing without knowing how many people actually participated in the survey--maybe they only surveyed 10 people. Or 20. Or 300. YLS could certainly have much more than 30% of its student population characterized as mentally healthy.Elston Gunn wrote:Assume literally everyone who didn't fill out the survey had no mental health issue. You're still getting ~30%+. The issue vs. illness is a big deal of course (I agree the title's super clickbaity for no reason.)jrc223 wrote:"Seventy percent of Yale Law School students who participated in the school’s Mental Health Alliance survey have struggled with mental health issues at some point during their law school careers."
I hardly think the point is that the YLS experience is especially bad, just that law school is shitty and they (YLS in particular maybe) do a shitty job of helping.
I agree with you otherwise, though.
Second Paragraph of The Fucking Article wrote:The report, which was released Monday afternoon, is the first of its kind at the law school. Titled “Falling Through the Cracks,” it consisted of an electronic survey sent out to all YLS students. Out of YLS’s student body of approximately 650 students, 296 responded.