<p>I've started to look at where the faculty of various departments at the top schools got their degrees (undergraduate and graduate.)</p>
<p>I started with Yale Law School (partly because it is ranked #1 by U.S. news, whether or not this is 'correct'--but also because I wanted to see how UChicago grads do at institutions other than UChicago.)</p>
<p>Below is a count of the number of Yale Law professors who have degrees from each school. (Many people went to more than one school--so if someone went to UChicago and Yale, for instance, both schools got credit.)</p>
<p>Number of Yale Law Professors who Have Degrees from the Following Schools:</p>
<p>Faculty</a> | Yale Law School</p>
<p>School Total
Yale 44
Harvard 26
UChicago 10
Oxford 7
Princeton 7
Columbia 5
Cambridge 4
Stanford 3
Cornell 3
Dartmouth 3
Michigan 3
MIT 2
Berkeley 2
Virginia 2
Brown 2
Washington 2
Georgetown 1
Naval 1
Ljubljana 1
Zagreb 1
Hamilton College 1
Arizona 1
Arizona State 1
Oberlin 1
Davidson 1
Emory 1
Middlebury 1
London 1
Missouri 1
Amherst 1
Williams 1
Indiana 1
Nebraska 1
LSE 1
Edinburgh 1
Tulane 1
Illinois 1
Hebrew 1
NYU 1
Bryn Mawr 1
Rochester 1
Antioch 1
Wellesley 1
Texas 1
Bates 1
George Washington 1
Rutgers 1
Johns Hopkins 1
Washington U. 1
UCLA 1</p>
<p>I counted full-time faculty (including emeritus and those on leave) but did not include visiting profs or adjuncts. (My hunch is the overall results wouldn't change much if you added the latter.)</p>
<p>Yale claims a full-time faculty of 'more than 60' and I counted 77 or so.</p>
<p>I'll look at other schools and departments in the future.</p>