No. Firms hire from the same schools they have always hired from. A drop from 100 to T3 is not going to change that, GWUs drop is not going to change that. US News screwing up and ranking Cooley tied with Yale in 2011 is not going to change that. Most of the lawyers I know, and I know a lot of them, have no clue what schools are ranked other then the very top 2-3 schools that never change, the school they went to and any local schools. Of course this changes a lot in markets like NYC and firms that follow the Cravath model, but the vast majority of lawyers don’t work there or at those firms. Places hire students from schools they have had success with in the past, on recommendations of other lawyers and on their ties with schools in the vast majority of markets. A change in a regional schools national rank is not going to matter because it does not impact the school’s reputation in that region.
I know it's conventional wisdom that they do.
Quote from: vansondon on August 10, 2009, 11:27:57 AMI know it's conventional wisdom that they do. i actually don't think this is the conventional wisdom.employer behavior drives the rankings. rankings do not drive employer behavior.in general, anyway.
Quote from: hooloovoo on August 10, 2009, 01:36:05 PMQuote from: vansondon on August 10, 2009, 11:27:57 AMI know it's conventional wisdom that they do. i actually don't think this is the conventional wisdom.employer behavior drives the rankings. rankings do not drive employer behavior.in general, anyway.Okay. How would you reconcile or further your view with the other arguments that say that rank and tier determines employer-related opportunity prospects for graduates and students? Is the determination really that unilateral?
Quote from: vansondon on August 10, 2009, 01:47:09 PMQuote from: hooloovoo on August 10, 2009, 01:36:05 PMQuote from: vansondon on August 10, 2009, 11:27:57 AMI know it's conventional wisdom that they do. i actually don't think this is the conventional wisdom.employer behavior drives the rankings. rankings do not drive employer behavior.in general, anyway.Okay. How would you reconcile or further your view with the other arguments that say that rank and tier determines employer-related opportunity prospects for graduates and students? Is the determination really that unilateral?an analogy: cars don't get a particular mileage because the EPA says that they do. they get a particular mileage based on completely different factors, and then the EPA gives them labels saying that they get particular mileages.same thing with schools: the rank and tier doesn't determine the employment opportunities. other factors determine the employment opportunities, and the rankings just categorize them according to what these opportunities look like.
What drives employer behavior? I meant to ask this earlier.
Quote from: vansondon on August 10, 2009, 02:58:07 PMWhat drives employer behavior? I meant to ask this earlier.past experience with hiring from schools is probably the biggest thing.i'd guess that there's also some kind of bias toward one's own alma mater as well.general school reputation probably plays a role, but more at a local level than a national one.