Is a 3.4 top 1/3 at Michigan?
Posted: Thu Jul 08, 2010 5:29 pm
This is what I've heard...can any Mich students verify this?
Further, what is top 35%?
Further, what is top 35%?
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huh? I can't answer the first question, sry, but I doubt there is a meaningful and consistent difference between top 33% and top 35%.Anonymous User wrote:This is what I've heard...can any Mich students verify this?
Further, what is top 35%?
Aeroplane wrote:The best available info on this is Dean Baum's letter w/3L gpa cutoffs. It's under 'judicial clerkship resources' on the career services site. Some things to keep in mind when using it:
1. GPA at graduation is higher than 1L, at least for most people (near the top that may be less true).
2. The letter averages 5 yrs worth of data, and there is grade inflation year to year. At least b/w this years letter and last year's there has been.
I do not believe there has been grade inflation for 1L classes. The curve is about a 3.2 and has stayed that way. Not sure about upper divs. Larger/more popular upper divs, like evidence, tax, etc. are curved strictly. Seminars are not. The policy is that classes of 40 and over are curved strictly.Anonymous User wrote:Aeroplane wrote:The best available info on this is Dean Baum's letter w/3L gpa cutoffs. It's under 'judicial clerkship resources' on the career services site. Some things to keep in mind when using it:
1. GPA at graduation is higher than 1L, at least for most people (near the top that may be less true).
2. The letter averages 5 yrs worth of data, and there is grade inflation year to year. At least b/w this years letter and last year's there has been.
Even for 1L classes?![]()
There is indeed grade inflation in almost every upper level class even if they allegedly follow a curve -- the mean is at 3.4 or 3.5. 1L classes do curve at 3.2, though, and I guess that it is about right that 3.4 is roughly top 1/3.