Is this move worth it? Forum
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Anonymous Posting
Anonymous posting is only available to the creator of each thread. The anonymous posting feature is intended to permit the solicitation of anonymous advice regarding the transfer application process, chances of being accepted, etc. Unacceptable uses include: testing the feature, questions which are clearly fake or hypothetical in nature, harassing other users, etc. Posters should also read and understand the announcements posted at the top of the Transfers forum prior to using the anonymous feature.
Failure to follow these rules will get you outed, warned, or banned.
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Is this move worth it?
I am currently in the top 5% at a school ranked between 30 and 40. I made law review. Incorporating my scholarship, my total debt if I graduate from that school will be $130K. I am considering transferring to Duke, UVA, Penn, or Georgetown. If I make the move, my debt at graduation will be ~$200K, so the difference is ~$70K. Does such a move make sense? My goal is biglaw in D.C., and I'd like to graduate with a credential that carries some weight. I can get biglaw right now at my present school. My current law school is unwilling to increase my scholarship. What does anyone think?
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Anonymous User wrote:I am currently in the top 5% at a school ranked between 30 and 40. I made law review. Incorporating my scholarship, my total debt if I graduate from that school will be $130K. I am considering transferring to Duke, UVA, Penn, or Georgetown. If I make the move, my debt at graduation will be ~$200K, so the difference is ~$70K. Does such a move make sense? My goal is biglaw in D.C., and I'd like to graduate with a credential that carries some weight. I can get biglaw right now at my present school. My current law school is unwilling to increase my scholarship. What does anyone think?
You might already know this, but with that class rank and school rank you might be able to do better than the schools you listed. I'm not sure what schools still have open applications, but consider applying to some better schools.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Thanks for the reply. I also applied to Harvard, Columbia, and NYU. I didn't list those in the original post because I'm not sure how realistic they are. I'm following those threads, and I think they are probably reach schools. If I got into Columbia, I'd be packed and on a flight to NY in minutes. But what about Penn or UVA? If I get into one of those schools, is the move worth it? I'm leaning towards transferring almost entirely because of prestige and potential options down the road. On the other hand, leaving will probably hurt my clerkship hopes. It is difficult for me to identify tangible benefits of transferring.
- rpupkin
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Re: Is this move worth it?
I think this is backwards. The name of your school helps you get your first job. After that, though, where you went to school becomes less and less important. By the time you're ten years out of law school, it's unlikely to matter at all.hartfordhockaloogies wrote:I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Are you suggesting that I stay put?rpupkin wrote:I think this is backwards. The name of your school helps you get your first job. After that, though, where you went to school becomes less and less important. By the time you're ten years out of law school, it's unlikely to matter at all.hartfordhockaloogies wrote:I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
This isn't necessarily true for all areas of law.rpupkin wrote:I think this is backwards. The name of your school helps you get your first job. After that, though, where you went to school becomes less and less important. By the time you're ten years out of law school, it's unlikely to matter at all.hartfordhockaloogies wrote:I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
I was in the same position last year. The best way to answer it is this way, is a Duke degree worth 70k + interest to you? If yes, then go for it. If not, then don't. You will probably get a biglaw job where you are at, and are probably in a better position to clerk by staying put, being on LR, and reaching out to faculty to help you land one. But, staying top 5% will be hard and you probably want to do that if you decide to pass up on a t14 degree. But more debt witll strap you to 2,000+ billable hours for a few extra years than you might want to. Either way, you can't go wrong. As for me, I decided to stay, and could not imagine facing more debt than I already have to; but this was a personal choice.
- rpupkin
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Not necessarily. I'm just saying you shouldn't transfer because of some perceived long-term effect of the value of the "name" of your law school.redblueyellowgreen wrote:Are you suggesting that I stay put?rpupkin wrote:I think this is backwards. The name of your school helps you get your first job. After that, though, where you went to school becomes less and less important. By the time you're ten years out of law school, it's unlikely to matter at all.hartfordhockaloogies wrote:I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
If some of the short-term goals you have (like working at a law firm in DC) are only possible if you transfer, then you should consider doing it.
- rpupkin
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Please elaborate.sandwhich wrote:This isn't necessarily true for all areas of law.rpupkin wrote:I think this is backwards. The name of your school helps you get your first job. After that, though, where you went to school becomes less and less important. By the time you're ten years out of law school, it's unlikely to matter at all.hartfordhockaloogies wrote:I know people that made a similar move and have become good friends with one. He mentioned that the name of the school was the deciding factor for him. The school will be on your resume for the rest of your life, and most people 10 years down the road won't care if you're summa cum at, say, Iowa, but they will care if you went to Duke, etc.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Thanks for the advice. I'm going to wait to see how all my apps do before I make a decision either way. Assuming I get into UVA, Duke, and Penn, which school makes the most sense? I'm leaning towards UVA and Penn since I want biglaw in D.C. Obviously, getting into harvard or CCN would make this decision pretty easy. UVA and Penn seem like peer schools.
These schools all cost about the same. Given my stats and goals, which school is arguably worth an additional $70K? What's my most rational move here?
These schools all cost about the same. Given my stats and goals, which school is arguably worth an additional $70K? What's my most rational move here?
- chuckbass
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Where is your school located. I think the best and most common advice for someone in your position is to stay if they want biglaw in general, but there's no way even top 5% at your school is guaranteed DC biglaw, so I think the move is justified if that's what you really want. Regardless you should still be bidding and mass mailing NYC and I hope you realize that DC biglaw is more than likely still not in the cards for you.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
While you can never be certain, Columbia isn't a reach for you. I'd say you are more likely to get in than to be rejected. But you can never predict these things for certain.redblueyellowgreen wrote:Thanks for the reply. I also applied to Harvard, Columbia, and NYU. I didn't list those in the original post because I'm not sure how realistic they are. I'm following those threads, and I think they are probably reach schools. If I got into Columbia, I'd be packed and on a flight to NY in minutes. But what about Penn or UVA? If I get into one of those schools, is the move worth it? I'm leaning towards transferring almost entirely because of prestige and potential options down the road. On the other hand, leaving will probably hurt my clerkship hopes. It is difficult for me to identify tangible benefits of transferring.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
The location of the school and where you want to work are likely most relevant. Your school is regional so while law review is a great prestige marker, its value diminishes with distance.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
My school is located in Virginia. And yes, I realize that DC is a tough market to break into. DC is my first choice, but I will also bid and mass mail NY.scottidsntknow wrote:Where is your school located. I think the best and most common advice for someone in your position is to stay if they want biglaw in general, but there's no way even top 5% at your school is guaranteed DC biglaw, so I think the move is justified if that's what you really want. Regardless you should still be bidding and mass mailing NYC and I hope you realize that DC biglaw is more than likely still not in the cards for you.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
This is tough. Either option could be argued for. On one hand, you could stay put and get DC big law, which would be your top choice. On the other, you could transfer and also get DC big law but be wondering what if every time you write your loan repayment checks. I think the deciding factor should be how people who graded onto LR at your school have fared in the last 5 years. Good luck!redblueyellowgreen wrote:My school is located in Virginia. And yes, I realize that DC is a tough market to break into. DC is my first choice, but I will also bid and mass mail NY.scottidsntknow wrote:Where is your school located. I think the best and most common advice for someone in your position is to stay if they want biglaw in general, but there's no way even top 5% at your school is guaranteed DC biglaw, so I think the move is justified if that's what you really want. Regardless you should still be bidding and mass mailing NYC and I hope you realize that DC biglaw is more than likely still not in the cards for you.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
If you are at W&L, run as fast as you can to Duke, Penn, Virginia, etc.
P.S. You should be admitted to Columbia.
P.S. You should be admitted to Columbia.
Last edited by CanadianWolf on Sun Jul 05, 2015 11:58 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Is this move worth it?
Thanks for the advice!AReasonableMan wrote:This is tough. Either option could be argued for. On one hand, you could stay put and get DC big law, which would be your top choice. On the other, you could transfer and also get DC big law but be wondering what if every time you write your loan repayment checks. I think the deciding factor should be how people who graded onto LR at your school have fared in the last 5 years. Good luck!redblueyellowgreen wrote:My school is located in Virginia. And yes, I realize that DC is a tough market to break into. DC is my first choice, but I will also bid and mass mail NY.scottidsntknow wrote:Where is your school located. I think the best and most common advice for someone in your position is to stay if they want biglaw in general, but there's no way even top 5% at your school is guaranteed DC biglaw, so I think the move is justified if that's what you really want. Regardless you should still be bidding and mass mailing NYC and I hope you realize that DC biglaw is more than likely still not in the cards for you.
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