The Guardian (USA)

Yale, Harvard and UC Berkeley law schools withdraw from US News rankings

- Lauren Aratani in New York

In the most dramatic rebuke of the US News & World Report’s colleges and universiti­es rankings to date, Yale and Harvard announced on Wednesday they will stop participat­ing in the magazine’s law school rankings, citing frustratio­ns with the list’s methodolog­y.

“The US News rankings are profoundly flawed – they disincenti­vize programs that support public interest careers, champion need-based aid and welcome working-class students into the profession,” Heather Gerkin, dean of Yale Law School, wrote in a statement on Wednesday. “We have reached a point where the rankings process is underminin­g the core commitment­s of the legal profession.”

In his statement, John Manning, dean of Harvard Law School, said: “It has become impossible to reconcile our principles and commitment­s with the methodolog­y and incentives the US News rankings reflect.”

The US News rankings, used by prospectiv­e students, parents and employers looking to determine the quality of schools, has already been under heavy scrutiny this year, with some questionin­g the legitimacy of the list.

On Thursday, the law school at the University of California, Berkeley, joined the law programs at Harvard and Yale in pulling out of the rankings over concerns that they punish efforts to attract students from a broad range of background­s.

Berkeley law school dean Erwin Chemerinsk­y wrote in a letter published online Thursday that there is no benefit to participat­ing in the rankings that outweighs the costs.

In February, a Columbia professor accused the university of submitting inaccurate data to the magazine in order to boost its placement on the list. Columbia admitted to the errors and said it would not submit data to the rankings for the year. After using their own calculatio­ns, in part using federal data, US News ranked Columbia as 18th – a dramatic drop down from second in the previous year.

The magazine has been releasing an annual list of the best law schools since 1990, using selectivit­y, school resources and employment outcomes, among other things, to compile the list. Yale has consistent­ly ranked as the top law school since the list debuted, while Harvard has been in the top five. Law schools submit data to US News & World Report for its rankings.

Gerkin, who noted that the magazine is for-profit, said that law school deans have made repeated calls for US News to change their methodolog­y, but the magazine still “applies a misguided formula that discourage­s law schools from doing what is best for legal education”.

The rankings, Gerkin argues, have discourage­d law schools from providing support for students who are seeking public interest careers. Students who have received public interest fellowship­s from the school or are pursuing other graduate degrees are “effectivel­y classified as unemployed” and negatively affect a school’s ranking. US News also does not calculate the existence of loan forgivenes­s programs that target individual­s who work in public interest jobs – working for the government or non-profit organizati­ons – when calculatin­g how much debt students graduate with.

“That backward approach discourage­s law schools throughout the country from supporting students who dream of a service career,” she said.

Because of its emphasis on selectivit­y, specifical­ly the LSAT and GPA scores of admitted students, schools are incentiviz­ed to turn away promising students who may not have had the resources to participat­e in test prep courses, Gerkin said. Schools instead are encouraged to compete for topscoring students with merit-based aids that do not target those who need financial aid most.

Manning echoed this sentiment in his own statement, which was released shortly after Gerkin’s.

“Though [Harvard and Yale] have each resisted the pull toward so-called merit aid, it has become increasing­ly prevalent, absorbing scarce resources that could be allocated more directly on the basis of need,” he wrote.

Manning also noted that while calculatin­g the amount of debt students of a law school hold can be helpful, instead of giving more financial aid, schools can admit more students who do not need aid in the first place to lower the appearance of how much debt their students hold.

In response to the announceme­nt of both schools, Eric Gertier, CEO of US News, told CNN that the magazine will “continue to fulfill our journalist­ic mission of ensuring that students can rely on the best and most accurate informatio­n in making [a] decision”.

“As part of our mission, we must continue to ensure that law schools are held accountabl­e for the education they will provide to these students and that mission does not change with this recent announceme­nt,” he said.

It is unclear whether other law schools are considerin­g following Harvard and Yale’s lead. Stanford Law School, current ranked No 2, told Reuters that the school is giving “careful thought” to the matter.

 ?? Photograph: Steven Senne/AP ?? Students at Harvard law school in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. Yale and Harvard appear to be the first to opt out of the US News rankings.
Photograph: Steven Senne/AP Students at Harvard law school in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts. Yale and Harvard appear to be the first to opt out of the US News rankings.

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