- Thu Apr 18, 2019 1:03 am
#64220
I’m deliberating between GW @ $31,790/y and UCI @ $20,000/y (plus subsidized grad housing, which would save me approx. $20k over three years--other COL about the same). I'll also note that I have about $50k saved in an education fund.
I'm interested in working soft-IP/technology, preferably, I think, doing transactional or non-litigation work. I've been in Los Angeles for the past 15 years and would be happy to live in D.C. and maybe even work on the East Coast after graduation, but I suspect that I will want to return to California eventually, especially since California probably has better markets for media/tech law. That being said, if GW offers substantially better job prospects in its respective market in these practice areas, then I'm not totally against staying out there.
In terms of job prospects, based on LST's 2017 data, GW and UCI seem to be comparable in terms of job prospects in their respective markets. However, for the preceding years, UCI only placed about half as many grads in big law and did GW (approx. 15% v. 28%). UCI did place many more judicial clerks in recent years (8-12% in recent years, compared to GW's 3.5-4.0%), which seems to even things out a bit, insofar as judicial clerkships are a proxy for big law employment under the principle that most of those who can obtain clerkships can ostensibly obtain a big law gig.
According to law professors I've spoken with at GW and UCLA, the UCI IP faculty is definitely on par with GW. There is a really cool public interest IP/technology clinic (GW doesn't have any IP related clinics--not that I'd go to a school just for a particular clinic). There are, on the other hand, many great soft-IP externship possibilities in D.C., such as positions at NPR or the patent and trademark office.
Based on my perception from preview day--I hope I don't offend anyone by saying this--UCI students don't seem as high caliber as GW students. By this, I don't mean that the people I spoke to at UCI lacked raw intellect or that they were not chill. It was more a sense that they didn't know as much about the law, the legal industry, or their reasons for wanting to go to law school. It also seemed that UCI admits/students came from less prestigious universities and/or held less prestigious jobs before starting law school. With the risk of sounding arrogant, I believe that the qualities of my future peers do matter and should be given some weight in deciding where to attend law school. For all I know, everyone I met at both schools thought that I was a complete dope. But from my perspective, it seems like I would benefit more from my peers at GW. I realize law school is about getting a degree and then a job. Still, the caliber of my future peers seems important to consider.
My assessment of UCI student, which I readily admit is only grounded in first impression, is nonetheless supported by objective standards: UCI's GPA/LSAT mediums are lower than GW's by a few points. I bring this up because I heard that some law firms will look at the GPA and LSAT profile of where you went to law school because they want to determine how well you did against the competition. I can't remember where I heard this--I think it was only the Thinking Like a Lawyer Podcast--can anyone confirm or deny? Is this something I should take into account?
One more factor, in favor of UCI, is that I'm waitlisted at UCLA and USC. A last-minute change of plans to either of those schools would be much easier from UCI than GW, as I wouldn't have to worry about a subleasing an apartment from the other side of the country while starting law school.
I would greatly appreciate any insights and comments re whether my comparisons and presumptions are valid or anything I may have overlooked. Thanks!
I'm interested in working soft-IP/technology, preferably, I think, doing transactional or non-litigation work. I've been in Los Angeles for the past 15 years and would be happy to live in D.C. and maybe even work on the East Coast after graduation, but I suspect that I will want to return to California eventually, especially since California probably has better markets for media/tech law. That being said, if GW offers substantially better job prospects in its respective market in these practice areas, then I'm not totally against staying out there.
In terms of job prospects, based on LST's 2017 data, GW and UCI seem to be comparable in terms of job prospects in their respective markets. However, for the preceding years, UCI only placed about half as many grads in big law and did GW (approx. 15% v. 28%). UCI did place many more judicial clerks in recent years (8-12% in recent years, compared to GW's 3.5-4.0%), which seems to even things out a bit, insofar as judicial clerkships are a proxy for big law employment under the principle that most of those who can obtain clerkships can ostensibly obtain a big law gig.
According to law professors I've spoken with at GW and UCLA, the UCI IP faculty is definitely on par with GW. There is a really cool public interest IP/technology clinic (GW doesn't have any IP related clinics--not that I'd go to a school just for a particular clinic). There are, on the other hand, many great soft-IP externship possibilities in D.C., such as positions at NPR or the patent and trademark office.
Based on my perception from preview day--I hope I don't offend anyone by saying this--UCI students don't seem as high caliber as GW students. By this, I don't mean that the people I spoke to at UCI lacked raw intellect or that they were not chill. It was more a sense that they didn't know as much about the law, the legal industry, or their reasons for wanting to go to law school. It also seemed that UCI admits/students came from less prestigious universities and/or held less prestigious jobs before starting law school. With the risk of sounding arrogant, I believe that the qualities of my future peers do matter and should be given some weight in deciding where to attend law school. For all I know, everyone I met at both schools thought that I was a complete dope. But from my perspective, it seems like I would benefit more from my peers at GW. I realize law school is about getting a degree and then a job. Still, the caliber of my future peers seems important to consider.
My assessment of UCI student, which I readily admit is only grounded in first impression, is nonetheless supported by objective standards: UCI's GPA/LSAT mediums are lower than GW's by a few points. I bring this up because I heard that some law firms will look at the GPA and LSAT profile of where you went to law school because they want to determine how well you did against the competition. I can't remember where I heard this--I think it was only the Thinking Like a Lawyer Podcast--can anyone confirm or deny? Is this something I should take into account?
One more factor, in favor of UCI, is that I'm waitlisted at UCLA and USC. A last-minute change of plans to either of those schools would be much easier from UCI than GW, as I wouldn't have to worry about a subleasing an apartment from the other side of the country while starting law school.
I would greatly appreciate any insights and comments re whether my comparisons and presumptions are valid or anything I may have overlooked. Thanks!
Last edited by commonlaw on Thu Apr 18, 2019 2:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.