SFrost wrote:There are a lot of jobs out there for middling law graduates and 50k really isn't that much for someone to take an informed risk on.
I mean, I went to a middling law school and my classmates all pretty much have jobs by now, but I'd like to know what jobs you're talking about, too. And the problem isn't necessarily someone taking out 50K, because that's an incredibly low debt load for most law schools these days.
I'm reluctant to say no one should EVER go to a school with an LST score below [insert number here] or no one should EVER pay sticker for [insert school with LST score whatever here], in part because people would have told me not to go where I did. But there are too many lawyers and many people who go to lower-ranked schools will pay a shitload of money and not get a job that they needed a JD to get. That seems like a pretty shitty position for someone to end up in, and it's that position that posters here want to help applicants avoid.
And as much as I agree that there's a NYC/major market/biglaw bias here (I move in different legal circles and it is different), I don't actually think top law schools really overqualify anyone for pretty much anything. But that's kind of a red herring because no one's saying you have to go to HYS to be a PD in rural Wyoming. (No one is saying your secretary with the guaranteed job should go to HYS, either - it's just most people don't have guaranteed jobs waiting for them.) They're just saying that if you're dead set on being a PD in rural Wyoming, you should go to Wyoming for free because going into a lot of debt to go to Wyoming to be a rural PD is a bad investment. Because either you'll get the PD job and end up servicing massive debt on $40K a year, which sucks, or you won't get the PD job and won't have a lot of other options because you went to Wyoming. (You can substitute small law for PD if you like.)
WillMcAvoy hasn't said don't go to TTTs. Just not to go into debt.
I realize there are people who aren't in a position to put together a good law school application, but those are the breaks. Maybe those people don't get to be lawyers. Or maybe they have to take a different path around.
I say this as someone who also came out of academia, where the job prospects are so bad, law looks great by comparison. But that doesn't actually make law's prospects good, just because they're better than almost the most terrible job market out there.