<p>The prestige, please don’t take this personal. </p>
<p>My concern lies on the fact that you’re posting ranking that’s useless and flawed. In addition to that, you seem convinced that your flawed ranking is infallible and you’re sharing your flawed ranking to other people such as by posting it on here, and trying to convince them that it is veridical despite the fact that your ranking has received many criticisms and corrections. But my biggest issue here is your lack of tolerance to absorb the points made by other posters about the flaws of your ranking. Again, I appeal to you to not take our discussion on a personal level. </p>
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No; you’re wrong. This isn’t just about law schools. This is about a Ranking For Undergrad With Highest Acceptance Rates To Law School. So, we better make this right. To do that, we have to divide the number of admitted students by the number of applicants. That is the correct and fair way of getting the average passign rate for each school. After all, why include those students who do not want to go to law school, or those students who aren’t involved in law school applications? </p>
<p>What you don’t understand (or don’t want to understand) is that large state schools such as Cal, UMich, UCLA, and to some extent UVa, operate differently from small private schools such as Brown, Duke and Dartmouth. Large state schools have usually many departments and most if not all of these departments are very large and independent from each other. For example, the College of L&S at Cal is already about the size of the entire Dartmouth or Brown. It’s strong emphasis on liberal arts and science makes it an ideal for prelaw or for those students who want to to attend law school. And, surely, it is where the bulk of law aspirants come from based on statistics. Additionally, every department/college at large state schools are managed by deans whose objectives are to promote the teaching and research of their field to the highest standard. If you’re from the college of engineering, for instance, you would never ever think that you would pursue law school because the orientation at your college is not geared towards becoming a lawyer. Aside, from that, Cal eng’g – as most eng’g programs are at any school – is tough and it doesn’t need to be a genius to sense it immediately that Cal eng’g would not be an ideal prelaw. So, in short, the system at large state schools is perplexed and much more complicated than small private schools’. Therefore, to compare this kind of schools to small private schools is not right.</p>
<p>Another thing to consider here is that there are undergrad majors that are said to be common prelaw. These are political science, history, economics, government, humanities, philosophy, and English. These programs dominate the student population at any law school anywhere in the English-speaking world. Therefore, it is not correct to count engineering students as major potential law aspirants.</p>
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<p>I’m here not because of Cal or UMich. (I’m from neither school. I mean, for undergrad I went to Cambridge, UK) I’m here because I found your ranking flawed, and your idea that those schools with very high acceptance rates to HLS in ratio to the whole school population are superior to those schools with fewer number of students represented at HLS is absurd and wrong.</p>