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The Go-To Law Schools

Our annual report on law schools that send their graduates to major law firms found prospects just marginally brighter for 2012 grads.

The National Law Journal

February 25, 2013

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Go-To Law Schools

This annual report focuses on what, for many law students, is the bottom line: ­whether they stand any chance in hell of landing a coveted ­associateship at a major law firm. We found that the picture was marginally brighter — but that isn’t saying much. We also examine trends in the hiring market, including a decline in large-firm participation in on-campus interviews. It’s less that they no longer believe in the cattle show — although one firm, Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan, has come up with an alternative that it likes — than that firms have fewer entry-level jobs to fill. Some elite law graduates, meanwhile, are finding a new appreciation for the charms of midsize firms.

BY THE NUMBERS

THE TOP 50 GO-TO LAW SCHOOLS
These schools sent the highest percentage of new graduates to NLJ 250 firms.

FIRM FAVORITES
The schools that NLJ 250 firms most relied upon for first-year associates.

TUITION COSTS
Our top 50 go-to schools ranked by tuition.

ASSOCIATES TO PARTNER
The schools that saw the most alumni promoted to partner during 2012.

GO-TO VS. 'U.S. NEWS'
The schools that outperformed their U.S. News & World report ranking in placing graduates at NLJ 250 firms.

Interactive graphic: Explore the data behind the Go-To Law Schools
For the first time ever, we are making all of the hiring data from our annual Go-To Law Schools special report available online. Search by law school to find out which NLJ 250 firms hired their 2012 graduates. Search by firm to see where new associate hires were educated. And don't miss our tuition-to-job-placement analysis.

RELATED ARTICLES

Skipping interviews 'a wonderful reprieve' for students and firm
Quinn Emanuel created a buzz in March when it announced it was abandoning the on-campus model — in which firms show up on law school campuses for several days of back-to-back, 20-minute interviews with second-year students seeking summer-associate jobs — in favor of spring cocktail receptions for students at six top law schools, where first-year students mingled with Quinn Emanuel attorneys.

On-campus interviewing takes a hit
Interviewing remains a big deal at many of the nation's top law schools, however, and pretty much the only way to snag an associate position at the largest law firms.
 

Midsize firms are happy about their choices these days
Slow hiring at their larger competitors makes them more attractive to the elite class of law school graduates.
 

Methodology: Data for this Go-To Law Schools special report were provided by the law firms surveyed for the NLJ 250, The National Law Journal’s annual survey of the nation’s 250 largest law firms by headcount. For firms that did not submit new associate numbers, we relied on data from ALM Media's RivalEdge database and independent reporting. We determined rankings by the percentage of 2012 juries doctor graduates who took associate jobs at NLJ 250 firms. In all, we have data from 248 firms covering 4,429 graduates. The two missing firms are Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and King & Spalding. The rankings do not reflect law graduates who took clerkships following graduation. 



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Firms mentioned

    
  • King & Spalding
  • Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
  • Quinn Emanuel Urquhart & Sullivan

Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • ALM Media
  • Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison
  • By The Numbers Inc.
  • United States of America News

Key categories

    
  • Law Schools

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