<p>does anyone have a link to where Harvard undergrads attend law school, as in names of schools and how many to each school? My niece asked me today if I had any info on Harvard undergrads and where they go to law, med, and grad school, and the percentage of grads who do. I thought I had some pages bookmarked with that info but it appears that they vanished during a computer issue I had last month. My brain mustn't be working well tonight either because I've been unable to find the information on the Harvard site. If anyone could help, with any or all of the law, med, grad school info, I'd be very appreciative.</p>
<p>Harvard students can get the "grids." Harvard doesn't post them publicly. So, you can't find them on the Harvard site because they are not there...unless Harvard has changed its policy within the last year. (If so,though, I think it would have been mentioned on this site and others.)</p>
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Harvard site because they are not there...unless Harvard has changed its policy within the last year
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<p>It has not.</p>
<p>Just as helpful is the Yale stats, which is available publicly.</p>
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<p>My niece asked me today if I had any info on Harvard undergrads and where they go to law, med, and grad school, and the percentage of grads who do.</p>
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<p>This is one question the Wall Street Journal can actually answer. They looked at five top (not THE five top, but five top) grad schools in each of three fields: law, medicine, and business. Around 24% of Harvard undergrads end up going to one of the 15 surveyed schools.</p>
<p>Law school is the group that I know best. Typically, about one out of every fifteen Harvard College grads goes on to either Harvard or Yale Law (~110 per year). No more than a third of each class goes to law school, so at least 20% of those who go to law school go to either Harvard or Yale. A large majority of the remaining kids go elsewhere in the top 14.</p>
<p>There are numbers floating around about the number that get PhD's, but I don't remember where...</p>