Cornell or Michigan? 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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Cornell or Michigan?
Does anyone have any insight on how transfers fare at Cornell v. Michigan with regards to employment? For Michigan, I believe that they think that transfers won't do well there - which is why they make a big to-do about how awesome their transfers are and the specific jobs they received. According to Law School Transparency, Cornell places approximately 22% more of its class in biglaw + fedclerk than Michigan.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
._.
Last edited by mister logical on Tue Jul 07, 2015 4:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
I think its the opposite...Anonymous User wrote:Does anyone have any insight on how transfers fare at Cornell v. Michigan with regards to employment? For Michigan, I believe that they think that transfers won't do well there - which is why they make a big to-do about how awesome their transfers are and the specific jobs they received. According to Law School Transparency, Cornell places approximately 22% more of its class in biglaw + fedclerk than Michigan.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
No I think he's right based on the face of the LST reportsBackpacker wrote:I think its the opposite...Anonymous User wrote:Does anyone have any insight on how transfers fare at Cornell v. Michigan with regards to employment? For Michigan, I believe that they think that transfers won't do well there - which is why they make a big to-do about how awesome their transfers are and the specific jobs they received. According to Law School Transparency, Cornell places approximately 22% more of its class in biglaw + fedclerk than Michigan.
http://www.lstscorereports.com/compare/ ... n/cornell/
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
Wasn't referring to that, should have more specifically quoted "For Michigan, I believe that they think that transfers won't do well there - which is why they make a big to-do about how awesome their transfers are and the specific jobs they received."sandwhich wrote:No I think he's right based on the face of the LST reportsBackpacker wrote:I think its the opposite...Anonymous User wrote:Does anyone have any insight on how transfers fare at Cornell v. Michigan with regards to employment? For Michigan, I believe that they think that transfers won't do well there - which is why they make a big to-do about how awesome their transfers are and the specific jobs they received. According to Law School Transparency, Cornell places approximately 22% more of its class in biglaw + fedclerk than Michigan.
http://www.lstscorereports.com/compare/ ... n/cornell/
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- Trippel
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
Go with the one that admits you in time for OCI.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
If already admitted, both Cornell + Michigan allow transfers to take part in OCI. Anyway, what I'm trying to figure out is if there is any prestige difference between the two and why Michigan is higher ranked despite having employment scores that are so bad(even compared to Duke, Berkeley, etc). For fedclerk purposes, is Michigan considered more "prestigious"? Would it be better to go to Cornell because of the higher placement rate in case one is unable to clerk eventually?
- Trippel
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
The LST link (posted above) indicates Michigan and Cornell have comparable federal clerkship numbers. Where do you want to practice after LS? Are you okay with NYC?
I think Cornell is a better option, but I also go there.
TLS is full of criticism of US News' methodology. If library size, etc. is important to you, go to Michigan. I could be wrong, but I think Ithaca has already reached prestige whore capacity.
I think Cornell is a better option, but I also go there.
TLS is full of criticism of US News' methodology. If library size, etc. is important to you, go to Michigan. I could be wrong, but I think Ithaca has already reached prestige whore capacity.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
With regards to location, I both have strong preferences but am also eminently pragmatic.
I realize that NYC is the easiest biglaw market in the country, however, that doesn't mean I have to like living in the city. I find NYC to be crowded, smelly, high-cost, high-tax, low-quality-of-life, etc etc. But, I'd be willing to live there (or in NJ taking the train in to Penn station in the morning) if it meant I could go in-house at Exxon in Dallas in two years and start collecting those corporate stock options. Ideally, I'd love to work in Texas but if I have to serve a 2 year sentence in NYC, so be it.
I realize that NYC is the easiest biglaw market in the country, however, that doesn't mean I have to like living in the city. I find NYC to be crowded, smelly, high-cost, high-tax, low-quality-of-life, etc etc. But, I'd be willing to live there (or in NJ taking the train in to Penn station in the morning) if it meant I could go in-house at Exxon in Dallas in two years and start collecting those corporate stock options. Ideally, I'd love to work in Texas but if I have to serve a 2 year sentence in NYC, so be it.
- chuckbass
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
This is false. In the past, Cornell usually didn't admit people in time to bid, but now has been accepting people in time for OCI.mister logical wrote:Cornell doesn't allow transfers to take part in OCI. Something to consider.
OP, Cornell clearly has better employment stats, so I'd say go with Cornell.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
scottidsntknow wrote:This is false. In the past, Cornell usually didn't admit people in time to bid, but now has been accepting people in time for OCI.mister logical wrote:Cornell doesn't allow transfers to take part in OCI. Something to consider.
OP, Cornell clearly has better employment stats, so I'd say go with Cornell.
My appologies, they updated the website since I looked at it last. scottidsntknow is correct and I'll go back and edit my response.
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Re: Cornell or Michigan?
OP would you mind sharing the timeline Cornell took to get back to you? Like from Complete to acceptance?Anonymous User wrote:With regards to location, I both have strong preferences but am also eminently pragmatic.
I realize that NYC is the easiest biglaw market in the country, however, that doesn't mean I have to like living in the city. I find NYC to be crowded, smelly, high-cost, high-tax, low-quality-of-life, etc etc. But, I'd be willing to live there (or in NJ taking the train in to Penn station in the morning) if it meant I could go in-house at Exxon in Dallas in two years and start collecting those corporate stock options. Ideally, I'd love to work in Texas but if I have to serve a 2 year sentence in NYC, so be it.
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