GULC EA
Posted: Thu Feb 07, 2013 11:23 pm
Everyone here seems to be anti-GULC for transfers. What's the deal?
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Because haters gonna hate...Anonymous User wrote:Everyone here seems to be anti-GULC for transfers. What's the deal?
Who is anti-GULC?Anonymous User wrote:Everyone here seems to be anti-GULC for transfers. What's the deal?
TLS gives GULC little love.3|ink wrote:Who is anti-GULC?Anonymous User wrote:Everyone here seems to be anti-GULC for transfers. What's the deal?
52% of GULC students got SA positions this year.Jessuf wrote:I think anti-GULC sentiment here is way too strong.
With that said, chances of big law as a transfer are probably a lot lower than you think they are. Many people in the transfer class who had great ranks at their old school are still struggling to find something for the summer. GULC's big law rate is somewhere around 33%. So if GULC takes 100 transfers per year, just think of your chance of getting big law as 33% at the highest, but possibly even lower due to transfer stigma at some of firms.
I don't think there is any empirical information about this. Anyone speaking would be coming from anecdotal evidence, but everyone I know who transferred has a job, with the exception of four or five people. So out of the 20 or so transfers I know, it looks good but then there is someone who says the opposite. I will say I know a couple transfers who got spots at V20 firms without journal and I know a couple on journals who didn't get an offer anywhere.Anonymous User wrote:So what is the % of transfer students who got SA positions this year?
52% of students in the c/o 2013 had 2L summer associate spots. That's what I'm referring to.Jessuf wrote:Sorry, I was talking about big law. And I was off. It was 30% of GULC in general that gets biglaw.
And about 52% end up in the private sector in general, which I'm assuming is what you're referring to.
Maybe we should ask the transfer group to put something together?Jessuf wrote:Sorry, I was talking about big law. And I was off. It was 30% of GULC in general that gets biglaw.
And about 52% end up in the private sector in general, which I'm assuming is what you're referring to.
I obviously have no statistical knowledge of what percent of transfers get big law. I just imputed that 30% to transfers. It could be higher, it could be lower. OCS had some sort of survey for the transfer students that I completed. Last summer, when preparing for OCI, I tried to get the results of a previous OCS transfer survey regarding big law and was told that information was "unavailable." It would be nice if transfer students maybe administered an anonymous SurveyMonkey survey to get some answers that could be shared with other students, including incoming transfers.
With that said, I have had an opposite experience as the other transfer in terms of anecdotes on SAs. I only know a few transfers with big law SAs, more transfers with mid law/small law SAs, about an equal number of transfers doing PI/Gov, and then probably about 5 who are still actively searching/waiting/interviewing at the moment. That's only maybe 30-35 people, and there are 100 total. Maybe the other 65 people are SAs for Cravath this summer.
However, the majority of 3Ls I know at this point have something lined up post-graduation, so that's definitely a good sign.
But getting away from employment talk, GULC is vastly better than my old school on almost every level. The professors are more accomplished, there is a bigger course load, the location is superior, there are more/better clinics, there are more/much better journals, etc. The only things my old school has on GULC are: (1) better moot court and trial teams but who cares about those rankings?; (2) better free food offers (and much more common/often); and (3) credit for journals and journals had tons of free, delicious food in the offices.
Even though I'm not doing big law, I don't regret coming here.
+1a11 1n wrote:I think the anti-GULC TLS groupthink is semi-warranted. GULC operates a machine, it brings in a shade under 600 students and then adds 100 transfers each year. That means the total class size increases by about 17%. No other law school increases its student body percentage by such a high margin. I just do not feel like looking it up, but if I recall correctly most schools increase their student body by about 10%. So that means transferring to GULC puts you in a larger transfer class compared to the rest of the t14. Couple that with GULC having the worst employment prospects of the t14, and you can begin to see why the hate is there.
Doesn't just about every school lose about 1/3rd of its 1Ls from dropouts? I thought that was one of the reasons schools started accepting transfers.a11 1n wrote:I think the anti-GULC TLS groupthink is semi-warranted. GULC operates a machine, it brings in a shade under 600 students and then adds 100 transfers each year. That means the total class size increases by about 17%. No other law school increases its student body percentage by such a high margin. I just do not feel like looking it up, but if I recall correctly most schools increase their student body by about 10%. So that means transferring to GULC puts you in a larger transfer class compared to the rest of the t14. Couple that with GULC having the worst employment prospects of the t14, and you can begin to see why the hate is there.
I have never heard that and I cannot imagine the number is anywhere near that high for any of the t14, including Georgetown.3|ink wrote:Doesn't just about every school lose about 1/3rd of its 1Ls from dropouts? I thought that was one of the reasons schools started accepting transfers.a11 1n wrote:I think the anti-GULC TLS groupthink is semi-warranted. GULC operates a machine, it brings in a shade under 600 students and then adds 100 transfers each year. That means the total class size increases by about 17%. No other law school increases its student body percentage by such a high margin. I just do not feel like looking it up, but if I recall correctly most schools increase their student body by about 10%. So that means transferring to GULC puts you in a larger transfer class compared to the rest of the t14. Couple that with GULC having the worst employment prospects of the t14, and you can begin to see why the hate is there.
The attrition rates at t14s are really low. I could see crappier schools losing a 1/3 of its class from dropouts/transfers though. Schools accept transfers because it generates a lot of revenue, since transfers typically pay sticker (i.e. you can easily see how adding 17% of its initial class size at sticker seriously increases the amount of money GULC is making).a11 1n wrote:I have never heard that and I cannot imagine the number is anywhere near that high for any of the t14, including Georgetown.3|ink wrote:Doesn't just about every school lose about 1/3rd of its 1Ls from dropouts? I thought that was one of the reasons schools started accepting transfers.a11 1n wrote:I think the anti-GULC TLS groupthink is semi-warranted. GULC operates a machine, it brings in a shade under 600 students and then adds 100 transfers each year. That means the total class size increases by about 17%. No other law school increases its student body percentage by such a high margin. I just do not feel like looking it up, but if I recall correctly most schools increase their student body by about 10%. So that means transferring to GULC puts you in a larger transfer class compared to the rest of the t14. Couple that with GULC having the worst employment prospects of the t14, and you can begin to see why the hate is there.
dsconn2 wrote:For what it is worth . . . T4 transfer . . . rejected EA, accepted during summer . . . 2 V5 offers