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January 2005
Mid-year law applications up a bit
The volume of law school
applications this year is running about the same as last year's record level, say admissions
officers and the Law School Admission Council (LSAC).
"It's still early in
the cycle, but in terms of sheer volume, we're seeing numbers that have been
about the same for the past two years," says Anita Walton, director of
admissions for Rutgers School of Law in Newark, NJ.
A spokesman for the
Law School Admission Council, a nonprofit corporation whose members are more
than 200 law schools, says numbers of those applying for law school so far this
year are up about 1.1 percent over last year. "But that's an almost negligible
increase," said the spokesperson.
Walton says the
economy often has an influence on the numbers of law school applicants.
"It goes in cycles.
When people can't find jobs, they may choose to enter law school. There's a lot
of versatility with a law degree," she says. She adds most observers view the US
economy now as neither bust nor boom, but with moderate job growth.
Mark Hill, senior
admission officer for the Duke University School of Law, says the number of
applicants seems to be "a little bit ahead of last year."
"One trend we've
noticed is that applications tend to come in earlier," he added.
The entire law
school admission process underwent significant changes in the 1980s when the
number of applicants exploded, say admissions counselors. The two most
significant changes: a shift in "rolling admissions" and the lengthening of the
admission process, sometimes from October all the way through the following
spring.
In 2002, there was
also a spurt of law school applications often attributed to the foundering
economy. The Law School Admissions Council reported that year there was an
increase of 17% of applicants over the previous year.
Figures from the
LSACF show the number of applicants often goes up and down depending on the
year. For example, in 1994-95, there were 78,400 applicants, but that number
fell to 66,700 in 1997-87. But in the past decade, the number of applicants
overall has grown. Through the fall of this year, the LSAC figures show 100,000
applicants, compared to 78,400 in 1994-95.
Typically, 35 to 50%
of applicants come in prior to January 1, says Renee Post, an
admissions
consultant and former Associate Director of Admissions at the
University of Pennsylvania Law School.
This year's group of
applicants in their make-up seems similar to previous years, say admissions
counselors.
"I'd say our
applicants are about the same as in the past," says Mary Bartlett, assistant
director of admissions, George Washington Law School. That means about evenly
divided between men and women.
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