Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

The "Wall Street Journal" Enters the Law School Rankings Debate

August 26, 2008 RSS Feed Print
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The debate about the potential impact of a possible change in the U.S. Newsmethodology for the upcoming law schools rankings continues to grow. Today, the Wall Street Journal weighs in with the front-page story "Law School Rankings Reviewed to Deter 'Gaming.'" The article offers up one analysis of the potential effect the inclusion of part-time students in the rankings data could have on the future of part-time law school programs.

Some background: In my blog post "Changing the Law School Ranking" Formula, we discussed the idea of combining both full-time and part-time entering student admission data for median LSAT scores and median undergraduate grade-point averages in the calculation of the school's ranking. Our current law school ranking methodology counts only full-time student data. Just to be clear, U.S. News is carefully contemplating the potential impact of such a methodology change; we will not make a decision until January 2009.

If implemented, for most law schools the changes in rankings would most likely be very small, because the differences between their combined data for both full- and part-time entering students versus full-time only are minimal. Of course, schools that have big differences in these two groups of data would be more heavily affected.

As always, we continue to talk with law school deans about the methodology, particularly those who have expressed their views on the negative impact such a change would have on their part-time programs. Some deans have told us they would have to choose between maintaining their law school rankings by raising the part-time programs' admission standards or maintaining the status quo of their part-time program and risk falling in the ranking.

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Wall Street Journal,
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Quite Frankly, the LSAT has nothing to do with how you will perform in law school. I had a 3.5 in undergrand and am doing quite well in law school now, but did poorely on the LSAT. The LSAT is just another form of revenue making for what is sad to say, the business of law school. Law schools place too much emphasis on the LSAT, and preclude students with good GPA's life experience, work experience, essentially all of the other factors that make a great and diverse student body. Schools that accept the lower LSAT scores, are ranked lower than schools that take the top LSAT scores. What is missing the USNews and other sources in their ranking is what the students bring to the table, how hard they work, and what they make of themselves. The affects of the LSAT place good students in what the US news report classifies as lower tier schools which ultimately affect the kinds of jobs students get after graduation, another factor that goes into the ranking system. In my opinion the LSAT, and ranking system is silly.

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Morse Code: Inside the College Rankings

Robert Morse is director of data research for U.S.News & World Report and has worked at the company since 1976. He develops the methodologies and surveys for the Best Colleges and Best Graduate Schools annual rankings, keeping an eye on higher-education trends to make sure the rankings offer prospective students the best analysis available. Morse Code provides deeper insights into the methodologies and is a forum for commentary and analysis of college, grad, and other rankings.

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