<p>Rank College #Students at Yale Law School - not adjusted by college class size
Yale University (82)
Harvard University (63)
Stanford University (36)
Columbia University (26)
Brown University (20)
Princeton University (17)
Dartmouth College (14)
Duke University (14)
University of California at Berkeley (14)
10 University of Chicago (13)
University of Pennsylvania (13)
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (12) </p>
<p>Rank College #Students at Yale Law School - adjusted by college class size
Yale University (82) - 5275 students (used as a baseline)
Harvard University (46) - 7181 students
Stanford University (28) - 6878 students
Princeton University (18) - 5113 students
Dartmouth College (18) - 4196 students
Columbia University (17) - 7934 students
Brown University (17) - 6316 students
8 University of Chicago (13) - 5134 students
Duke University (11) - 6504 students
University of Pennsylvania (7) - 10394 students
University of California at Berkeley (3) - 25530 students
University of Michigan at Ann Arbor (2) - 26208 students</p>
<p>I simply don’t see anything problematic with UChicago students’ job prospect.</p>
<p>I don’t know what’s up with jhaverford, but she appears to have some kind of grudge against this school. Maybe she got waitlisted or rejected. I simply don’t know.</p>
<p>I am a proud UChicago student, and I think there are tremendous number of opportunities for everyone here. I’ve learned more than I could have ever imagined in small, discussion-based classes, and I can’t see myself anywhere else. Stop blaming the school. UChicago has done absolutely nothing wrong, and the faculty, students here are simply top-notch.</p>
<p>This just shows how ignorant you really are. As we all know, McKinsey was founded in Chicago, and James McKinsey actually served as a professor at the Booth School. You’re telling me, that a company that is, perhaps, more connected to UChicago than to any other schools, does not recruit at this honorable institution? Give me a break.</p>
<p>If you actually look closer, you’ll find a long, long list of events held at the Harper Center. And please be rest assured, that McKinsey recruits at UChicago very hard, perhaps harder than at anywhere else.</p>
<p>Please actually do your research before posting, or risk getting embarrassed like this. I’m just sedentarily waiting for the quarter to start, so I find refuting you, with substantive evidence, quite enjoyable.</p>
<p>I asked an alum at McKinsey about this. He was rather confused . . .</p>
<p>~</p>
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<p>So you’re claiming that a school with a good (undergraduate or graduate) program in economics implies that that school’s graduates will populate good business schools? Because a good economics program means graduates will have ‘strong work experience’ which supports admission into good b-schools? </p>
<p>I don’t care about your statistics, but at least please clean up your claims here :P</p>
He should be rightfully confused that he got a job at McKinsey considering that the firm doesn’t consider UChicago to be a target school.;)</p>
<p>
Uh, thanks for the history lesson but you’re talking about McKinsey’s connections with the Booth School of Business at UChicago and not the undergraduates. I’m sure McKinsey recruits hard atBooth but it does not have an independent recruiting process with school-specific deadlines at the undergraduate level for Chicago unlike its peer schools. You can check the above link I provided if you don’t believe me. I believe its quite explicit.</p>
<p>
I mean, you’re just insulting yourself at this point. Booth and the University of Chicago undergraduate program have nothing to do with each other. I guess I understand the defense mechanism since I would be on edge too if I faced the prospect of employment after being duped into believing I attended a top 10 American university with regards to job opportunities.</p>
<p>You can scroll back to as many different class profiles at UVA Law as you want but the University of Chicago has never made the top 10-15 list at this prestigious school.</p>