So, I have been wondering about this for sometime now. Is it really THAT important to graduate from a T25 Law School vs. graduating from an ABA accredited law school ranked in the top 50? Do you think it is that much harder to get a job, and that much harder to make a six figure salary? I had a Prof who graduated from temple law, and she was the corporate council of my town, and we were talking and she was explaining to me how she had Harvard, NYU, and Columbia graduates working for her, and she said all they knew how to do was read, and write, hardly ever able to speak in public, I mean she said they were smart, but that's as far as it went. What are your opinions on this?
BTW no I am not in it for the money, however I do not want to graduate with 250K of debt, and then work making 50K a year.
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If you absolutely know what city you want to practice in, then it's worth looking into local schools with decent to great local outcomes. If you don't know where you want to live or don't care, then it's in your best interest to go to the best school possible to keep your options open.
I would take anecdotal evidence like what you posted with a grain of salt because I too would talk shit about people from HYS if they worked for me and I went to somewhere lower ranked. And I think the same would be true of a lot of people. But her experience is pretty useless in the grand scheme of things because the vast majority of T14 graduates will have better outcomes upon graduation than will almost every single Temple graduate. Also, if she is 10-20 years removed from law school then I'm sure there is some generational bias going on as well.
But the real takeaway is all about your goals. If you want big law then you're just making it harder to achieve that goal if you don't go to a T14. But if you want to go home and hang a shingle or be a public defender then just go somewhere in the upper half of law schools and you'll generally be fine.
While certain schools are better for studying international law because of their faculty and other factors, that does not mean that translates to a job in the field. The route most likely to pay off is to go from a T14 into a big law job where you can convince them to immediately let you into their international division and then lateral out to an NGO or whatever type of gig you are really looking for after 3-5 years at the firm.
Also, do you speak any language besides English? It's not necessary or sufficient but since this is something almost everyone says they want to do then you need quite a bit to separate yourself out from the pack. I speak French and will graduate with my master's in international relations in October and I still would have a difficult time breaking into the field so I would just do a lot more research and temper your expectations somewhat.