Mark the Date

  • CMU Tepper Chatter, December 4, 2008
    On Thursday, December 4, 2008 at 10:00 AM PT/ 1:00 PM ET/6:00 PM GMT Laurie Stewart, Carnegie Mellon's Executive Director of MBA Admissions along with other members of the CMU community, will participate in Accepted.com’s annual CMU Tepper admissions chat. If you are applying to CMU Tepper this chat presents an outstanding opportunity to ask all your questions about its programs, “tracks,” admissions policies, and student life. Get the answers you want and need!
  • MIT Diversity Chat, November 24, 2008
    Join us for "MIT Diversity," a series of 2 online MBA chats focused on different groups and backgrounds within MIT’s diverse community. On Monday, November 24, 2008 beginning at 9:00 AM PT/12:00 PM ET/5:00 PM GMT Accepted.com will host Barry Reckley & Deirdre Kane, MIT Sloan Admissions Assistant Directors, as well as other members of the MIT community for the following chat topics: Start Time: 9:00 AM/PT/12:00 PM ET/5:00 PM GMT Topic: Military Chat with Barry Reckley Start Time: 11:00 AM/PT/2:00 PM ET/7:00 PM GMT Topic: LGBT Chat with Deirdre Kane
  • NYU Stern Chat Series, Monday, December 15, 2008
    Join Accepted.com, Stern MBA Admissions and current Stern students for three online chats focused on specific areas of interest. The NYU Stern chats will be held on Monday, December 15, 2008 and occur at the following times: CHAT: Consulting & Strategy 9:00 AM PT/12:00 PM ET/5:00 PM GMT CHAT: Social Enterprise 10:30 AM PT/1:30 PM ET/6:30 PM GMT CHAT: Marketing 12:00 PM PT/3:00 PM ET/8:00 PM GMT Each Chat will provide 45 minutes of answers to your questions about Stern's resources in the specific area of interest.
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April 09, 2008

Reaction to Law School Rankings

Reactions to last month's 2009 US News Grad School Rankings, particularly for law schools range from the thoughtful to the laughable:

Applicants put way too much emphasis on small differences in overall rankings. They should be looking at ability to get a job after graduation, bar passage rates, overall student satisfaction, the actual program at a time when many law schools are becoming innovative, and a host of other factors. They tend to focus on the rankings which too frequently are a crutch that replaces research into a program and its strengths and weaknesses.  The data behind the rankings provides some of that info, but the applicants should go deeper to really understand the different programs.

At the same time, the frequently two-faced and sometimes defensive reaction of law schools to the rankings is spineless. Schools brag about their ranking to alumni and prospective students -- if it goes up. They respond defensively if they go down. How about examining them with a degree of objectivity? Perhaps the rankings provide clues to areas in which a school needs to improve. If they are meaningless, then schools shouldn't brag about them or cooperate with them regardless of the result.

Rankings should neither be the sole source of feedback for schools nor determinative in applicant or administrative decision-making. While I welcome a constructive examination of ranking results on the part of law schools, as Michael

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