Ranking Law Schools with LSATs, Employment Outcomes, and Law Review Citations

30 Pages Posted: 20 Jun 2014 Last revised: 23 Apr 2016

Date Written: June 17, 2014

Abstract

This paper returns to the much-discussed topic of ranking law schools. Where U.S. News & World Report includes a wide variety of factors – some of which are criticized as irrelevant to what prospective students care about or should care about – this paper looks to three variables. They are median LSAT score of entering students, which seeks to capture the quality of the student body; the percentage of the graduating students who are employed at 9 months following graduation at full-time, permanent JD required jobs (a separate analysis excludes school-funded positions and solo practitioners from this variable); and the number of citations to each school’s main law review, which seeks to capture a school’s recent reputation. It rank orders each of those variables, averages those ranks to obtain a new ranking, and then compares those new rankings to the U.S. News & World Report rankings of the 147 schools for which U.S. News provided ranks in March 2014. It identifies the schools that improve and decline the most with the new ranking. This paper provides ranks for all 194 ABA accredited law schools that U.S. News included in its rankings released in 2014, including the 47 schools that U.S. News put in its “unranked” category.

Keywords: law school rankings, LSAT, employment outcome, law reviews, citations

Suggested Citation

Brophy, Alfred L., Ranking Law Schools with LSATs, Employment Outcomes, and Law Review Citations (June 17, 2014). 91 Indiana Law Journal Supplement 55 (2015), UNC Legal Studies Research Paper No. 2456032, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2456032 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2456032

Alfred L. Brophy (Contact Author)

affiliation not provided to SSRN

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