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Should UVA Change Its Approach to On-Campus Interviewing?

UVA logo.JPGAn interesting debate has broken out on the UVA Law Blog in response to the tepid fall recruiting situation for UVA 2Ls:

[T]he truth is that many, many second-year students are struggling in the job search. I’m not privy to any official numbers coming out of Career Services (although I understand such numbers will be available soon), but the UVA Law Blog website (maintained by myself and others) ran an informal poll a few weeks ago that sheds some light on the situation. Of the nearly 100 local responses, nearly a quarter of respondents were voicing some degree of frustration with trying to get a job … . The legal market is contracting, large firms are cutting their summer class sizes, and some smaller firms are eliminating their summer programs altogether.

Well, it’s bad all over.

But students at the University of Virginia School of Law face a unique set of challenges compared to their T-14 brethren. UVA stands alone among the T-14 in having “prescreening” for fall on-campus interviewing slots:

Virginia is the only school ranked in the top 15 by U.S. News and World Report that continues to use this practice, by which employers select based on resume and grades which students they will talk to at OGI. Virginia’s peer schools have a different system by which interviews are allocated on the basis of student demand: you rank the firms with which you want to interview in order from most to least, and a computer system allocates available interviews accordingly.

Prescreening is loved by employers (and perhaps one of the reasons OGI is so popular) but has questionable benefits for students. A student at or near the top of the class will get most of his interview selections, a student more towards the bottom will not. A partial lottery system in place helps to rectify the situation somewhat, but most interview slots are still prescreened.

At first blush, it’s not apparent that abandoning prescreening would help anybody get a callback. If the firm got to look at your “stats” before they met you and still didn’t make you an offer, it seems like having lower grades would just be a waste of everybody’s time.

But UVA students express a wide range of opinions after the jump.

There are obvious benefits to the way the rest of the top schools dole out their interview slots. The UVA Law Blog makes the point well:

Simply, there is a reason why other top law schools don’t prescreen. They trust their students to make appropriate choices about how to rank their firms, and provide the students with information (such as the average GPA granted a callback) such that students do not make to many unrealistic choices. What this means is that the same handful of students at the top of the class aren’t getting the all the callbacks (remember, quota!) from 25 different firms. Allocating screening interviews by interest means that the students who are talking to the firm are doing so because they have a strong interest in working therre, not just because they have good grades; at the same time, arming students with information about the firm’s GPA cutoffs (which Career Services at many other schools collects) means that students for the most part will still be ‘quaified’ to work there. The result, we think, is that callbacks will be spread more evenly throughout the class.

But the bottom line is that there are not a lot of slots available and people at the top probably deserve the right to keep as many options open as possible. As one person put it:

I think that LR kids work harder than many of us, myself included, and deserve the better job prospects they have. If a kid with a 3.8 takes 25 OGIs she isn’t being a jerk. She’s making sure she has options. There’s nothing wrong with that.

No law school should be able to tell a great student that he or she cannot apply for OGIs with, say, the top 15 vault ranked firms. You might take issue with such a selection strategy. However, denying this student the right to do that is totally unfair, whether or not other top law schools do it.

What does the larger community think? We all know employers love being able to see grades before they meet applicants. But since when do we care about what law firm recruitment departments think?

Good luck to all the 2Ls still looking for a summer position. 1Ls? I’m sure some of your professors could use summer personal research assistants?

What OGI Problems, Part III: Prescreening? [UVA Law Blog]

Earlier: Accept Your Offers: An Alternative Viewpoint
Accept Your Offers Part 7: White & Case v. Nervous T-10 1L?

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