<p>Nat, you’re quite the Harvard booster here on the Princeton board. In answer to your question, a careful reading of the data may help. </p>
<p>There may be a couple of “apples-to-oranges” problems. If you go to the Yale career services website you’ll find that the most recent report available online is for students entering law school in the fall of 2007. (The button linking to that report says it is for 2008 but the linked report itself clearly notes that it is for 2007 applicants/enrollees.) Yale may have the updated statistics for the 2008 application year but they’re not posted on their website.<br>
<a href=“http://www.yale.edu/visvi/students/gradprof/lawschool/media/lawstats.pdf[/url]”>http://www.yale.edu/visvi/students/gradprof/lawschool/media/lawstats.pdf</a></p>
<p>The statistics from Princeton, available on their website and used by the writer of the article are, as the article states, for Princeton applicants “awarded admission in 2008.” In other words, it appears that two different years are being compared here. The years 2008 and 2009 saw a larger number of law school applications due to the downturn in the economy with tougher competition for all, especially at the leading law schools, so acceptance rates tended to be lower than in 2007. [Interested</a> in Grad School? So Are a Lot of Folks - Economix Blog - NYTimes.com](<a href=“http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2009/03/06/interested-in-grad-school-so-are-a-lot-of-people/]Interested”>Interested in Grad School? So Are a Lot of Folks - The New York Times)</p>
<p>The second issue here is that the applicant pools represented by both of these sets of numbers include alumni. In fact, the vast majority of the applicants are alumni. In Yale’s case 78% of the applicants in 2007 and I would guess the number for Princeton was something similar in 2008. There is absolutely no way of knowing the academic profile of this random group of alumni applying in any given year. While the profile of the group of current students applying is probably more predictable the profile of the alumni applying could change far more from one year to the next. So, to answer your question, yes, it’s certainly possible, even likely, that these numbers would change from year to year. When the numbers are so small and so close already, minor changes would produce noticeable swings.</p>
<p>So, we’re comparing statistics from one school for 2008 to statistics from another school for 2007. Even if the source data were from the same year, we have the problem that it is a single year comparison only and there is great variability due to the profile of the alumni who make up the majority of the applicant pools. I would have to say that the writer of the Daily Princetonian article could have been more careful in the analysis.</p>
<p>In the end, however, the differences here are very slight. Graduating from either school will give you a significant advantage in being admitted to the top law schools. (I personally had no problem at all.)</p>
<p>Finally, if you need the Harvard stroking, I’m happy to oblige. I was accepted as an undergraduate both there and at Yale but chose Princeton instead. It is undoubtedly true that in the Rhodes and Marshall competitions, Harvard has done far better than Princeton even on a per capita basis (though the difference becomes smaller when taking into account Princeton’s size relative to Harvard’s). In comparing Princeton and Yale, Princeton has had the advantage in both those competitions. In absolute numbers Princeton leads Yale in Marshall Scholars. On a per capita basis (again, taking into account Yale’s larger student body and number of applicants), Princeton leads Yale easily in the number of both Marshall and Rhodes Scholars. All three are fine schools and, as I have written numerous times before, they are not the only fine schools in this country. Motivated undergraduates can receive an equally spectacular education at literally dozens of U.S. universities.</p>