« Top Ten Reasons To Become A Judicial Law Clerk | Main | Etiquette for the Bar »
January 12, 2007
Largest Law Firms Hire From Elite Schools
A recent article featured in the National Law Journal on January 10, 2007 discusses which law schools the largest law firms hire from in greatest numbers. Michigan, not surprisingly, was among the top ten schools. Some of the schools that did remarkably well with large law firms such as Columbia and University of Chicago send most of their students to New York and Chicago respectively. Not so for Michigan, which has a student body that tends to spread out geographically more than Michigan's peer school, according to Susan Guindi, Assistant Dean of Career Services at Michigan. You can read the full article below.
With a few exceptions, the nation's largest law firms continued to rely on renowned private schools in the eastern half of the country to fill their first-year associate ranks in 2006.
Columbia Law School was the top pick among the country's 250 biggest law firms for hiring first-year associates last year. Some 69.6% of the law school's graduates who earned juris doctor degrees in 2006 went to work for law firms included in The National Law Journal's 2006 annual survey of the nation's 250 largest law firms. Of the 450 graduates at Columbia Law School, 313 took jobs as first-year associates at NLJ 250 firms.
Not surprisingly, the nation's largest law firms, whose sizes ranged from 3,535 attorneys down to 172 attorneys, typically turned to elite law schools east of the Mississippi River for first-year hires in 2006. The lone showing from the West Coast among the top 10 schools most often tapped by big law firms was Stanford Law School.
Columbia Law School Dean David Schizer attributed his school's strong performance in part to the large number of applications to its juris doctor program that it receives each year.
"It allows us to be incredibly selective," he said.
Rounding out the top five schools that sent the greatest percentage of juris doctor graduates to NLJ 250 firms were University of Pennsylvania Law School, at 68.2%; University of Chicago Law School, at 65.1%; Harvard Law School, at 59.2%; and Duke Law School, at 56.8%.
Yale Law School, routinely ranked No. 1 in U.S. News & World Report's annual ranking of graduate and professional schools, ranked 15th among the law schools recruited most often by the NLJ 250 law firms. Among its 203 juris doctor graduates, 46.8%-or 95 graduates-went to NLJ 250 firms. Contributing to Yale's relatively lower percentage are the large numbers of graduates who apply for judicial clerkships after earning a juris doctor degree, said Janet Conroy, director of public affairs at Yale Law School. The same held true for Stanford Law School, ranked second in this year's U.S. News & World Report but eighth among the schools from which the NLJ 250 firms recruited.
The University of Minnesota Law School, ranked 19th in 2006 by U.S. News & World Report, sent a relatively low percentage of students- 18.1%-to NLJ 250 firms. Of its 270 graduates, 49 went to those shops.
Susan Gainen, director of career and professional development at the University of Minnesota Law School, attributed that percentage to about one-quarter of the school's graduates taking judicial clerkships after graduation. She also said that many graduates stay in the Twin Cities area. "We have some excellent firms, but not many in the NLJ 250," she said.
MOST POPULAR FOR HIRING
Law schools with the highest percentage of graduates hired by NLJ 250 firms.
Law School Percentage hired Number of J.D.s in 2006 Number hired
________________________________________
Columbia Law School 69.6% 450 313
________________________________________
University of Pennsylvania 68.2% 274 187
________________________________________
University of Chicago 65.1% 192 125
________________________________________
Harvard Law School 59.2% 571 338
________________________________________
Duke Law School 56.8% 220 125
________________________________________
New York University 56.6% 465 263
________________________________________
Cornell University 56.0% 193 108
________________________________________
Stanford Law School 54.9% 175 96
________________________________________
University of Michigan 54.3% 431 234
________________________________________
University of Virginia 54.1% 375 203
________________________________________
Northwestern University 54.0% 265 143
________________________________________
Georgetown University 53.0% 626 332
________________________________________
University of California-Berkeley 49.0% 300 147
________________________________________
Vanderbilt University 48.0% 202 97
________________________________________
Yale Law School 46.8% 203 95
________________________________________
Boston College 39.1% 284 111
________________________________________
George Washington 38.8% 482 187
________________________________________
Fordham University 38.8% 477 185
________________________________________
University of Texas 38.6% 502 194
________________________________________
University of Southern California 36.3% 215 78
________________________________________
Source: NLJ research
Duke edged out New York University School of Law, the sixth most popular supplier of first-year associates. Some 56.6% of the 465 New York law school graduates in 2006 headed to NLJ 250 firms.
Other schools among the top 10 were Cornell Law School, at 56.0%; Stanford at 54.9%; University of Michigan Law School, at 54.3%; and University of Virginia School of Law, at 54.1%. (Of the NLJ 250 firms, 19 did not respond to the survey's question about law schools.)
In 2005, when the NLJ looked at first-year associate hiring at just the top 50 law firms, Columbia was the No. 1 school. Other law schools among the top five in 2005 most often recruited were, in descending order, Northwestern University, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard, University of Chicago and Stanford.
A look at law firm hiring patterns in 2006 shows that the largest among the NLJ 250, Baker & McKenzie, recruited the largest number of its first-year associates from Georgetown University Law Center, which sent 53.0% of its graduates to NLJ 250 firms. Baker & McKenzie has 3,535 attorneys. Georgetown was ranked 12th among the most popular schools from which law firms recruited.
The second-largest law firm, DLA Piper, with 3,333 lawyers, hired from 38 different law schools, including some second- and fourth-tier schools. The greatest number of DLA Piper hires from any school was five graduates. The University of Michigan Law School and the University of Illinois College of Law each provided five first-year associates.
DLA Piper national hiring partner Benjamin Boyd said that some of the firm's most motivated and loyal associates have come from the upper ranks of less popular schools.
"They come in and want to knock the cover off the ball and prove something," said Boyd. He added that about 80% of the firm's first-year associates graduate from schools ranked in the top 50 by U.S. News & World Report.
The school relied upon the most by Jones Day, the third-largest law firm, was the University of Texas School of Law, which provided the 2,167-attorney enterprise with nine first-year associates. Jones Day also recruited six attorneys each from the University of Michigan, Georgetown and Case Western Reserve University School of Law.
Latham & Watkins, the nation's fourth-largest law firm with 1,951 lawyers, hired most of its 245 first-year associates in its U.S. offices from Harvard, which supplied 24 recruits. The law firm also hired 22 from Northwestern, 18 from Columbia and 17 from New York University.
The fifth-largest firm, New York's Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, with 1,915 attorneys, recruited most heavily from Columbia, which provided 14 of its first-year associates. Twelve graduates from Georgetown joined the firm, as did 11 from Harvard and 11 from University of Pennsylvania.
Law firms among the 250 largest also recruited from about 50 foreign law schools in 2006. Canada was the most popular source, where some 18 first-year associates came from University of Toronto Faculty of Law and 10 from McGill University Faculty of Law.
NLJ January 2007
What schools big firms hire from
Select 'Print' in your browser menu to print this document.
©2006 National Law Journal Online
Page printed from: http://www.nlj.com
Back to Article
________________________________________
FROM THE UPCOMING ISSUE
Largest law firms hire from elite schools
Leigh Jones/Staff reporter
January 10, 2007
With a few exceptions, the nation's largest law firms continued to rely on renowned private schools in the eastern half of the country to fill their first-year associate ranks in 2006.
Columbia Law School was the top pick among the country's 250 biggest law firms for hiring first-year associates last year. Some 69.6% of the law school's graduates who earned juris doctor degrees in 2006 went to work for law firms included in The National Law Journal's 2006 annual survey of the nation's 250 largest law firms. Of the 450 graduates at Columbia Law School, 313 took jobs as first-year associates at NLJ 250 firms.
Not surprisingly, the nation's largest law firms, whose sizes ranged from 3,535 attorneys down to 172 attorneys, typically turned to elite law schools east of the Mississippi River for first-year hires in 2006. The lone showing from the West Coast among the top 10 schools most often tapped by big law firms was Stanford Law School.
Columbia Law School Dean David Schizer attributed his school's strong performance in part to the large number of applications to its juris doctor program that it receives each year.
"It allows us to be incredibly selective," he said.
Rounding out the top five schools that sent the greatest percentage of juris doctor graduates to NLJ 250 firms were University of Pennsylvania Law School, at 68.2%; University of Chicago Law School, at 65.1%; Harvard Law School, at 59.2%; and Duke Law School, at 56.8%.
Yale Law School, routinely ranked No. 1 in U.S. News & World Report's annual ranking of graduate and professional schools, ranked 15th among the law schools recruited most often by the NLJ 250 law firms. Among its 203 juris doctor graduates, 46.8%-or 95 graduates-went to NLJ 250 firms. Contributing to Yale's relatively lower percentage are the large numbers of graduates who apply for judicial clerkships after earning a juris doctor degree, said Janet Conroy, director of public affairs at Yale Law School. The same held true for Stanford Law School, ranked second in this year's U.S. News & World Report but eighth among the schools from which the NLJ 250 firms recruited.
The University of Minnesota Law School, ranked 19th in 2006 by U.S. News & World Report, sent a relatively low percentage of students- 18.1%-to NLJ 250 firms. Of its 270 graduates, 49 went to those shops.
Susan Gainen, director of career and professional development at the University of Minnesota Law School, attributed that percentage to about one-quarter of the school's graduates taking judicial clerkships after graduation. She also said that many graduates stay in the Twin Cities area. "We have some excellent firms, but not many in the NLJ 250," she said.
MOST POPULAR FOR HIRING
Law schools with the highest percentage of graduates hired by NLJ 250 firms.
Law School Percentage hired Number of J.D.s in 2006 Number hired
________________________________________
Columbia Law School 69.6% 450 313
________________________________________
University of Pennsylvania 68.2% 274 187
________________________________________
University of Chicago 65.1% 192 125
________________________________________
Harvard Law School 59.2% 571 338
________________________________________
Duke Law School 56.8% 220 125
________________________________________
New York University 56.6% 465 263
________________________________________
Cornell University 56.0% 193 108
________________________________________
Stanford Law School 54.9% 175 96
________________________________________
University of Michigan 54.3% 431 234
________________________________________
University of Virginia 54.1% 375 203
________________________________________
Northwestern University 54.0% 265 143
________________________________________
Georgetown University 53.0% 626 332
________________________________________
University of California-Berkeley 49.0% 300 147
________________________________________
Vanderbilt University 48.0% 202 97
________________________________________
Yale Law School 46.8% 203 95
________________________________________
Boston College 39.1% 284 111
________________________________________
George Washington 38.8% 482 187
________________________________________
Fordham University 38.8% 477 185
________________________________________
University of Texas 38.6% 502 194
________________________________________
University of Southern California 36.3% 215 78
________________________________________
Source: NLJ research
Duke edged out New York University School of Law, the sixth most popular supplier of first-year associates. Some 56.6% of the 465 New York law school graduates in 2006 headed to NLJ 250 firms.
Other schools among the top 10 were Cornell Law School, at 56.0%; Stanford at 54.9%; University of Michigan Law School, at 54.3%; and University of Virginia School of Law, at 54.1%. (Of the NLJ 250 firms, 19 did not respond to the survey's question about law schools.)
In 2005, when the NLJ looked at first-year associate hiring at just the top 50 law firms, Columbia was the No. 1 school. Other law schools among the top five in 2005 most often recruited were, in descending order, Northwestern University, University of Pennsylvania, Harvard, University of Chicago and Stanford.
A look at law firm hiring patterns in 2006 shows that the largest among the NLJ 250, Baker & McKenzie, recruited the largest number of its first-year associates from Georgetown University Law Center, which sent 53.0% of its graduates to NLJ 250 firms. Baker & McKenzie has 3,535 attorneys. Georgetown was ranked 12th among the most popular schools from which law firms recruited.
The second-largest law firm, DLA Piper, with 3,333 lawyers, hired from 38 different law schools, including some second- and fourth-tier schools. The greatest number of DLA Piper hires from any school was five graduates. The University of Michigan Law School and the University of Illinois College of Law each provided five first-year associates.
DLA Piper national hiring partner Benjamin Boyd said that some of the firm's most motivated and loyal associates have come from the upper ranks of less popular schools.
"They come in and want to knock the cover off the ball and prove something," said Boyd. He added that about 80% of the firm's first-year associates graduate from schools ranked in the top 50 by U.S. News & World Report.
The school relied upon the most by Jones Day, the third-largest law firm, was the University of Texas School of Law, which provided the 2,167-attorney enterprise with nine first-year associates. Jones Day also recruited six attorneys each from the University of Michigan, Georgetown and Case Western Reserve University School of Law.
Latham & Watkins, the nation's fourth-largest law firm with 1,951 lawyers, hired most of its 245 first-year associates in its U.S. offices from Harvard, which supplied 24 recruits. The law firm also hired 22 from Northwestern, 18 from Columbia and 17 from New York University.
The fifth-largest firm, New York's Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom, with 1,915 attorneys, recruited most heavily from Columbia, which provided 14 of its first-year associates. Twelve graduates from Georgetown joined the firm, as did 11 from Harvard and 11 from University of Pennsylvania.
Law firms among the 250 largest also recruited from about 50 foreign law schools in 2006. Canada was the most popular source, where some 18 first-year associates came from University of Toronto Faculty of Law and 10 from McGill University Faculty of Law.
Posted by hafeezt at January 12, 2007 11:58 AM