Paul L. Caron
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Wednesday, December 9, 2020

Princeton Review's Best 164 Law Schools (2021 Edition)

Princeton ReviewThe Princeton Review has published the 2021 edition of The Best 164 Law Schools (press release) (FAQs) (methodology):

The ranking lists, reported in 14 categories, each name the top 10 law schools. The education services company tallied the lists based on its surveys of 14,000 students attending 164 law schools [an average of 85 per school] in the U.S., and of administrators at those schools. The Princeton Review's 80-question student survey for this project asked students to rate their law schools on dozens of topics and report on their school experiences. The survey of law school administrators, which numbered more than 200 questions, covered topics from academic offerings and admission requirements to data about currently enrolled students as well as graduates' employment. Six of the 14 ranking lists were tallied using both student and administrator-reported data, five solely from student data, and three solely from administrator data.

Best Quality of Life:  Based on student answers to survey questions on: whether there is a strong sense of community at the school, whether differing opinions are tolerated in the classroom, the location of the school, the quality of social life at the school, the school's research resources (library, computer and database resources).

  1. Virginia
  2. Vanderbilt
  3. Florida State
  4. Samford
  5. Stanford
  6. Colorado
  7. Pennsylvania
  8. St. Thomas (MN)
  9. Duke
  10. Pepperdine

Best Professors:  Based on student answers to survey questions concerning how good their professors are as teachers and how accessible they are outside the classroom.

  1. Virginia
  2. Duke
  3. Chicago
  4. Washington & Lee
  5. Stanford

Best Classroom Experience:  Based on student answers to survey questions concerning their professors' teaching abilities and overall accessibility outside of the classroom, the balance of theory and practical skills in the curricula and the range of courses available, the level of tolerance for differing opinions in class discussion, and their assessments of research resources available.

  1. Virginia
  2. Stanford
  3. Duke
  4. Chicago
  5. Vanderbilt

Best Career Prospects:  Based on school reported data and student surveys. School data include: the median starting salaries of graduating students, the percent of students employed in a job that requires bar passage (and not employed by the school) and the percent of these students who pass the bar exam the first time they take it. Student answers to survey questions on: how much the law program encourages practical experience; the opportunities for externships, internships and clerkships, and how prepared the students feel they will be to practice the law after graduating.

  1. NYU
  2. Stanford
  3. Michigan
  4. Virginia
  5. Duke

Most Diverse Faculty:  Based on school reported data and student surveys. School data: the percent of the law school faculty that is from an underrepresented minority group. Student answers to a survey question on whether the faculty comprises a broadly diverse group of individuals.

  1. Southern
  2. District of Columbia
  3. Florida International
  4. Hawaii
  5. UC-Davis

Most Competitive Students:  Based on student answers to survey questions on: the number of hours they study outside of class each day, the number of hours they think their fellow students study outside of class each day, and the degree of competitiveness among students at their school.

  1. Baylor
  2. Syracuse
  3. BYU
  4. Faulkner
  5. Southwestern

Most Liberal Students:  Based on student answers to a survey question concerning the political bent of the student body at large. The survey question was "If there is a prevailing political bent among students at your school, how would you characterize it?" Answer choices were: "Very Liberal, Liberal, Middle of the Road, Somewhat Conservative, Very Conservative."

  1. Northeastern
  2. American
  3. Pennsylvania
  4. Oregon
  5. Maryland

Most Conservative Students:  Based on student answers to a survey question concerning the political bent of the student body at large. The survey question was "If there is a prevailing political bent among students at your school, how would you characterize it?" Answer choices were: "Very Liberal, Liberal, Middle of the Road, Somewhat Conservative, Very Conservative."

  1. Ave Maria
  2. BYU
  3. George Mason
  4. Faulkner
  5. Texas Tech

Greatest Resources for Minority Students:  Based on school reported data and student surveys. School data: the percent of the student body that is from an underrepresented minority group. Student answers to a survey question on whether all students receive equal treatment by fellow students and the faculty, regardless of ethnicity.

  1. St. Thomas (Florida)
  2. Hawaii
  3. District of Columbia
  4. San Francisco
  5. Southern

Greatest Resources for Women:  Based on school reported data and student surveys. School data: the percent of the student body that are women. Student answers to a survey question on whether all students are afforded equal treatment by students and faculty regardless of their gender.

  1. Stanford
  2. Vermont
  3. New England
  4. Toledo
  5. District of Columbia

Most Chosen by Older Students:  Based on the average age of entry of law school students and student reports of how many years they spent out of college before enrolling in law school.

  1. District of Columbia
  2. CUNY
  3. New Mexico
  4. Maine
  5. Hawaii

Toughest to Get Into:  Based on school reported data. Factors include: median LSAT scores and undergraduate GPAs of entering 1L students, the percent of applicants accepted, and the percent of accepted applicants who enroll.

  1. Yale
  2. Harvard
  3. Stanford
  4. Columbia
  5. Pennsylvania

Unfortunately, the Princeton Review did not release the response rate per school, so it is impossible to determine how the rankings are affected by each school's representation among the respondents.

For prior Princeton Review Law School Rankings, see:

Princeton Review's Best 167 Law Schools (2020 Edition)

https://taxprof.typepad.com/taxprof_blog/2020/12/princeton-reviews-best-164-law-schools-2021-edition.html

Law School Rankings, Legal Ed Rankings, Legal Education | Permalink

Comments

Meaningless piffle that serves mainly to show... that Virginia law students filled out the survey en masse.

From their methodology: "Note: we don't have a "Best Overall Academics" ranking list nor do we rank the law schools 1 to 164 on a single list because we believe each of the schools offers outstanding academics"

While one appreciates the restraint from making one master listicle of no redeeming value (except to harried employers looking for that One Quick Fix to ignore 95% of resumes), the last clause of that sentence is simply untrue and we all know it.

Posted by: Unemployed Northeastern | Dec 9, 2020 8:25:21 AM