Most people attend law school to obtain jobs as lawyers. Which schools are the best for this?
The post The Best Law Schools In America For Career Prospects (2024) appeared first on Above the Law.

‘Yessssss, we got jobs as lawyers!’

The Princeton Review recently released its annual law school ranking, covering the best 168 law schools in the country (but disregarding the fact that there are ~200 law schools with varying degrees of accreditation by the ABA). Our condolences to the ~30 law schools that were unable to make the cut for the Princeton Review’s 2024 edition of the rankings — it must sting knowing that your institution is part of the small sliver of law schools that aren’t among the “best.”

We’ve focused on one of the 14 rankings categories that we thought people would be the most interested in: The law schools where graduates have the best career prospects. It wasn’t long ago that the Princeton Review’s loose definition of “career prospects” meant an entire class of law graduates could be putting the “bar” in “barista,” but thankfully the methodology was changed, and these career rankings mean something now.

Princeton Review’s “Best Career Prospects” results are now based on highly relevant data reported by law school administrators, including median starting salaries, the percentage of students employed in jobs requiring bar passage (and not employed by the school — a factor that is now at odds with the U.S. News law school rankings), and the percentage of students who were able to pass the bar exam on their first try. The Princeton Review also relies on responses from student surveys.

Here are the top 10 law schools on the Princeton Review’s “Best Career Prospects” list for 2024. Things changed a bit for T14 schools this year:

1. New York University School of Law (no change)2. University of Virginia School of Law (no change)3. University of Michigan Law School (no change)4. Duke University School of Law (ranked #5 last year)5. Northwestern University Pritzker School of Law (ranked #8 last year)6. Stanford University School of Law (ranked #4 last year)7. Harvard University Law School (ranked #9 last year)8. Cornell University Law School (not ranked last year)9. University of California Berkeley School of Law (ranked #7 last year)10. UCLA School of Law (not ranked last year)

What happened to once again create such shuffling in the rankings? For the answer, let’s return to Princeton Review’s methodology. Each law school was given a “career rating,” which on top of all of the statistical data reported by law school administrators, includes the following information:

This rating measures the confidence students have in their school’s ability to lead them to fruitful employment opportunities, as well as the school’s own record of having done so. This rating takes into account both student survey responses and school-reported statistical data. We ask students about how much the law program encourages practical experience; the opportunities for externships, internships, and clerkships; and how prepared to practice law they expect to feel after graduating.

Princeton Review continues to rely much too heavily on students’ feedback over actual data. Once again, people who felt like they’d get great jobs were more important than the people who were actually able to get great jobs. For example, this may be why UVA Law, with ~93% of the class of 2022 employed in full-time, long-term jobs where bar passage was required (discounting seven school-funded positions) is in second place, while Columbia Law, with ~93% of the class of 2022 employed in full-time, long-term jobs where bar passage was required (discounting six school-funded positions) was booted from this year’s ranking entirely.

Did your law school make the cut? If it did, do you think it was ranked fairly? If it didn’t make the list for best career prospects, do you agree with that assessment? Please email us or text us (646-820-8477) with your thoughts.

Best Law Schools 2024 [Princeton Review]Best Career Prospects 2024 [Princeton Review]

Staci Zaretsky is a senior editor at Above the Law, where she’s worked since 2011. She’d love to hear from you, so please feel free to email her with any tips, questions, comments, or critiques. You can follow her on X/Twitter and Threads or connect with her on LinkedIn.