Most law students dream of passing the bar exam after graduating from law school and finding a job in the legal industry as a lawyer. They don’t dream of only being able to put the “bar” in “barista” because their law school pedigree is limiting them in the job market. When you’ve got up to six figures of nondischargeable debt to service after graduation, you want to know that your résumé will make it to a hiring partner’s desk — not the nearest garbage pail.
How can you be certain that the school your law degree is from won’t be a hindrance in your job search? Are graduates of your school actually capable of being hired for law jobs and putting their degrees to use? Sadly, these are questions students must ask themselves.
Law.com produced several helpful charts based on law school employment data for the class of 2017. Today, we will highlight one of the more concerning charts, the law schools with the highest percentage of underemployed graduates. These law school graduates are either unemployed, employed in temporary or part-time work, or working in nonprofessional jobs. Here are the top 12 law schools that have helped graduates land rather underwhelming positions:
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- Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico: 64.23 percent
- Inter American University of Puerto Rico: 50.88 percent
- Detroit Mercy: 47.02 percent[1]
- Thomas Jefferson: 44.25 percent
- LaVerne: 42.11 percent
- Whittier (RIP): 41.61 percent
- Valparaiso (RIP?): 40.00 percent
- North Carolina Central: 38.73 percent
- Elon: 38.46 percent
- Florida Coastal: 37.82 percent
- Golden Gate: 35.63 percent
- U. San Francisco: 34.64 percent
That’s disheartening. (Note that we included the top 12 schools here because thanks to Hurricane Irma’s devastation, graduates of law schools in Puerto Rico had better things to do with their time than find jobs — like stay alive.)
Click here to see the rest of the law schools with the highest percentage of underemployed graduates, plus other informative charts detailing the schools with the highest percentage of graduates working in Biglaw and in state and federal clerkships, as well as the schools with the most unemployed graduates.
Are you a recent law school graduate who hasn’t been able to find a full-time legal job or a job in the legal profession? What has your law school done to help? We’re interested in learning about your experiences — good or bad — and may anonymously feature some of your stories on Above the Law. You can email us, text us at (646) 820-8477, or tweet us @atlblog. Best of luck in your job search!
[1] Detroit Mercy Law’s statistics include Canadian & American Dual JD graduates who are completing ten-month articling positions after graduation (i.e., short-term by ABA definition) to fulfill the experiential training component of the Ontario licensing process.
Law Grads Hiring Report: Job Stats for the Class of 2017 [Law.com]
Staci Zaretsky has been an editor at Above the Law 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 Twitter or connect with her on LinkedIn.