ranni wrote:I just received a call from the Dean today and was offered a seat off the wait list. I will be attending this fall. I had a 161 and a 3.5 gpa. There is still hope people. Good luck.
Instate or OOS?
ranni wrote:I just received a call from the Dean today and was offered a seat off the wait list. I will be attending this fall. I had a 161 and a 3.5 gpa. There is still hope people. Good luck.
I wouldn't worry about it. UNC has it's hands tied by the NC Legislator and they can't function like a normal law school. They have to waitlist/deny exceptionally overqualified applicants in order to let in random N Carolinians with mediocre numbers....and then they give them an ENORMOUS discount to attend a top-ranked school. It's no wonder they have little difficulty filling their class....the local discount and preference overshadows anything and everything the adcoms do.rbriggs2 wrote:Just visited today to see what the campus was like and look around Chapel Hill/Durham. Talked to the director of admissions about the waitlist, and it wasn't the most productive conversation. She wasn't interested at all in me or maybe talking about my file she was more interested in lecturing me on why to go ahead and enroll at a different school. It was actually somewhat funny to hear that from her when just about every applying law student should have a backup plan. Anyway wasn't very impressed with her or the law building itself, it had it's good points but I expected more from a school with UNC's reputation. She did tell me that the waitlist is pretty much at a stand still and that they have their class pretty much filled at 254 for the fall.
I wouldn't necessarily say UNC has its hands tied by its in-state requirements and tuition considering that central purpose/reason for UNC's existence is to educate North Carolinians for as close to free as possible. At least according to its charter in the state constitution.Regionality wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. UNC has it's hands tied by the NC Legislator and they can't function like a normal law school. They have to waitlist/deny exceptionally overqualified applicants in order to let in random N Carolinians with mediocre numbers....and then they give them an ENORMOUS discount to attend a top-ranked school. It's no wonder they have little difficulty filling their class....the local discount and preference overshadows anything and everything the adcoms do.rbriggs2 wrote:Just visited today to see what the campus was like and look around Chapel Hill/Durham. Talked to the director of admissions about the waitlist, and it wasn't the most productive conversation. She wasn't interested at all in me or maybe talking about my file she was more interested in lecturing me on why to go ahead and enroll at a different school. It was actually somewhat funny to hear that from her when just about every applying law student should have a backup plan. Anyway wasn't very impressed with her or the law building itself, it had it's good points but I expected more from a school with UNC's reputation. She did tell me that the waitlist is pretty much at a stand still and that they have their class pretty much filled at 254 for the fall.
Want to continue reading?
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
Ok, fair enough. But in terms of their ability to recruit the most talented class and create the most successful lawyers, they do have their hands tied...and I bet there are a few people at that institution who resent that their state school has the strictest state-preferential-treatment requirements of any state school in the country.Merr wrote:I wouldn't necessarily say UNC has its hands tied by its in-state requirements and tuition considering that central purpose/reason for UNC's existence is to educate North Carolinians for as close to free as possible. At least according to its charter in the state constitution.Regionality wrote:I wouldn't worry about it. UNC has it's hands tied by the NC Legislator and they can't function like a normal law school. They have to waitlist/deny exceptionally overqualified applicants in order to let in random N Carolinians with mediocre numbers....and then they give them an ENORMOUS discount to attend a top-ranked school. It's no wonder they have little difficulty filling their class....the local discount and preference overshadows anything and everything the adcoms do.rbriggs2 wrote:Just visited today to see what the campus was like and look around Chapel Hill/Durham. Talked to the director of admissions about the waitlist, and it wasn't the most productive conversation. She wasn't interested at all in me or maybe talking about my file she was more interested in lecturing me on why to go ahead and enroll at a different school. It was actually somewhat funny to hear that from her when just about every applying law student should have a backup plan. Anyway wasn't very impressed with her or the law building itself, it had it's good points but I expected more from a school with UNC's reputation. She did tell me that the waitlist is pretty much at a stand still and that they have their class pretty much filled at 254 for the fall.
I do not think what you say in your first paragraph (bolded) is their goal though. Thus why I do not think their hands are tied. UNC's goal is to provide affordable education to NC residents and through that to train quality NC attorneys. To go a step further I think UNC would be tying its hands in regards to primary goal if it did away with its strict preferential treatment. This is because they would be educating far fewer NC residents and would probably train fewer NC lawyers as a result of OOSers leaving after school.Regionality wrote:Merr wrote:
I wouldn't necessarily say UNC has its hands tied by its in-state requirements and tuition considering that central purpose/reason for UNC's existence is to educate North Carolinians for as close to free as possible. At least according to its charter in the state constitution.
Ok, fair enough. But in terms of their ability to recruit the most talented class and create the most successful lawyers, they do have their hands tied...and I bet there are a few people at that institution who resent that their state school has the strictest state-preferential-treatment requirements of any state school in the country.
So UNC does have its hands tied...but the NC Government/Population is getting what they want from their state school (I guess?)
So tell me, why does UNC need to have such strong preferential treatment compared to other states? Is the state incapable of attracting people from out of state for legal jobs at competitive salaries with a good quality of life?Merr wrote:I do not think what you say in your first paragraph (bolded) is their goal though. Thus why I do not think their hands are tied. UNC's goal is to provide affordable education to NC residents and through that to train quality NC attorneys. To go a step further I think UNC would be tying its hands in regards to primary goal if it did away with its strict preferential treatment. This is because they would be educating far fewer NC residents and would probably train fewer NC lawyers as a result of OOSers leaving after school.Regionality wrote:Merr wrote:
I wouldn't necessarily say UNC has its hands tied by its in-state requirements and tuition considering that central purpose/reason for UNC's existence is to educate North Carolinians for as close to free as possible. At least according to its charter in the state constitution.
Ok, fair enough. But in terms of their ability to recruit the most talented class and create the most successful lawyers, they do have their hands tied...and I bet there are a few people at that institution who resent that their state school has the strictest state-preferential-treatment requirements of any state school in the country.
So UNC does have its hands tied...but the NC Government/Population is getting what they want from their state school (I guess?)
UNC has such strong preferences because the legislature, which established and controls the UNC system, feels that such a strong preference is needed to fulfill the constitutional mandate for the UNC system.Regionality wrote:
So tell me, why does UNC need to have such strong preferential treatment compared to other states? Is the state incapable of attracting people from out of state for legal jobs at competitive salaries with a good quality of life?
UNC is extreme. An argument could be made that the state would attract many qualified legal minds from out of state who go to UNC for law school and then establish a career/life because they like the state.
I understand the goal of educating North Carolinians...but defining that is much different than defining an "American", and it's very possible that a NC'ian would free-load on UNC and peace the hell out just like an OOSer would come to UNC and fall in love with the state and stay.
So I stand by my point. UNC doesn't get to attract as qualified a student body, and subsequently, probably cannot graduate as qualified a student body than if they weren't hamstrung by such strict requirements. So I actually think it may not serve the state as well as you are suggesting it will because it inherently discourages folks with strong legal minds from moving to the state in the first place...
...but it's an interesting debate.
You make some really good points but they are all circumstantial. North Carolinians are more likely to stay in state than oosers therefore it is irrelevant to try and attract oosers to come here.You are right that ISers may take advantage of the lower tuition then "peace out" but those ISers were residents and more than likely worked a job that paid taxes as well as their parents (as tax payers). The fact is that regardless of the policy, even if they wanted to have a more equal ratio, they can't allow more OOSers due to the state constitution.Regionality wrote:So tell me, why does UNC need to have such strong preferential treatment compared to other states? Is the state incapable of attracting people from out of state for legal jobs at competitive salaries with a good quality of life?Merr wrote:I do not think what you say in your first paragraph (bolded) is their goal though. Thus why I do not think their hands are tied. UNC's goal is to provide affordable education to NC residents and through that to train quality NC attorneys. To go a step further I think UNC would be tying its hands in regards to primary goal if it did away with its strict preferential treatment. This is because they would be educating far fewer NC residents and would probably train fewer NC lawyers as a result of OOSers leaving after school.Regionality wrote:Merr wrote:
I wouldn't necessarily say UNC has its hands tied by its in-state requirements and tuition considering that central purpose/reason for UNC's existence is to educate North Carolinians for as close to free as possible. At least according to its charter in the state constitution.
Ok, fair enough. But in terms of their ability to recruit the most talented class and create the most successful lawyers, they do have their hands tied...and I bet there are a few people at that institution who resent that their state school has the strictest state-preferential-treatment requirements of any state school in the country.
So UNC does have its hands tied...but the NC Government/Population is getting what they want from their state school (I guess?)
UNC is extreme. An argument could be made that the state would attract many qualified legal minds from out of state who go to UNC for law school and then establish a career/life because they like the state.
I understand the goal of educating North Carolinians...but defining that is much different than defining an "American", and it's very possible that a NC'ian would free-load on UNC and peace the hell out just like an OOSer would come to UNC and fall in love with the state and stay.
So I stand by my point. UNC doesn't get to attract as qualified a student body, and subsequently, probably cannot graduate as qualified a student body than if they weren't hamstrung by such strict requirements. So I actually think it may not serve the state as well as you are suggesting it will because it inherently discourages folks with strong legal minds from moving to the state in the first place...
...but it's an interesting debate.
Where ya headed?somewherewarm wrote:I think there will be a spot opening fairly soon. I just withdrew today. Out of stater, GPA below median LSAT above.
somewherewarm wrote:I think there will be a spot opening fairly soon. I just withdrew today. Out of stater, GPA below median LSAT above.
Register now!
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login