Law School Statistics

April 8th, 2015 / By

Earlier this week, I noted that even smart academics are misled by the manner in which law schools traditionally reported employment statistics. Steven Solomon, a very smart professor at Berkeley’s law school, was misled by the “nesting” of statistics on NALP’s employment report for another law school.

Now Michael Simkovic, another smart law professor, has proved the point again. Simkovic rather indignantly complains that Kyle McEntee “suggests incorrectly that The New York Times reported Georgetown’s median private sector salary without providing information on what percentage of the class or of those employed were working in the private sector.” But it is Simkovic who is incorrect–and, once again, it seems to be because he was misled by the manner in which law schools report some of their employment and salary data.

Response Rates

What did McEntee say that got Simkovic so upset? McEntee said that a NY Times column (the one authored by Solomon) gave a median salary for Georgetown’s private sector graduates without telling readers “the response rate.” And that’s absolutely right. The contested figures are here on page two. You’ll see that 362 of Georgetown’s 2013 graduates took jobs in the private sector. That constituted 60.3% of the employed graduates. You’ll also see a median salary of $160,000. All of that is what Solomon noted in his Times column (except that he confused the percentage of employed graduates with the percentage of the graduating class).

The fact that Solomon omitted, and that McEntee properly highlighted, is the response rate for the number of graduates who reported those salaries. That number appears clearly on the Georgetown report, in the same line as the other information: 362 graduates obtained these private sector jobs, but only 293 of them disclosed salaries for those jobs. Salary information was unavailable for about one-fifth of the graduates holding these positions.

Why does this matter? If you’ve paid any attention to the employment of law school graduates, the answer is obvious. NALP acknowledged years ago that reported salaries suffer from response bias. To see an illustration of this, take a look at the same Georgetown report we’ve been examining. On page 4, you’ll see that salaries were known for 207 of the 211 graduates (98.1%) working in the largest law firms. For graduates working in the smallest category of firms, just 7 out of 27 salaries (25.9%) were available. For public interest jobs that required bar admission, just 15 out of 88 salaries (17.0%) were known.

Simkovic may think it’s ok for Solomon to discuss medians in his Times column without disclosing the response rate. I disagree–and I think a Times reporter would as well. Respected newspapers are more careful about things like response rates. But whether or not you agree with Solomon’s writing style, McEntee is clearly right that he omitted the response rate on the data he discussed.

So Simkovic, like Solomon, seems to be confused by the manner in which law schools report information on NALP forms. 60% of the employed graduates held private sector jobs, but that’s not the response rate for salaries. And there’s a pretty strong consensus that the salary responses on the NALP questionnaire are biased–even NALP thinks so.

Misleading By Omission

The ABA’s standard employment report has brought more clarity to reporting entry-level employment outcomes. Solomon and Simkovic were not confused by data appearing on that form, but by statistics contained in NALP’s more outmoded form. Once again, their errors confirm the problems in old reporting practices.

More worrisome than this confusion, Solomon and Simkovic both adopt a strategy that many law schools followed before the ABA intervened: they omit information that a reader (or potential student) would find important. The most mind-boggling fact about Georgetown’s 2013 employment statistics is that the school itself hired 83 of its graduates–12.9% of the class. For 80 of those graduates, Georgetown provided a full year of full-time employment.

Isn’t that something you would want to know in evaluating whether “[a]t the top law schools, things are returning to the years before the financial crisis”? That’s the lead in to Solomon’s up-beat description of Georgetown’s employment statistics–the description that then neglects to mention how many of the graduates’ jobs were funded by their own law school.

I’m showing my age here, but back in the twentieth century, T14 schools didn’t fund jobs for one out of every eight graduates. Nor was that type of funding common in those hallowed years more immediately preceding the financial crisis.

I’ll readily acknowledge that Georgetown funds more graduate jobs than most other law schools, but the practice exists at many top schools. It’s Solomon who chose Georgetown as his example. Why are he and Simkovie then so silent about these school-funded jobs?

Final Thoughts

I ordinarily wouldn’t devote an entire post to a law professor’s errors in reading an employment table. We all make too many errors for that to be newsworthy. But Simkovic is so convinced that law schools have never misled anyone with their employment statistics–and here we have two examples of smart, knowledgeable people misled by those same statistics.

Speaking of which, Simkovic defends Solomon’s error by suggesting that he “simply rounded up” from 56% to 60% because four percent is a “small enough difference.” Rounded up? Ask any law school dean whether a four-point difference in an employment rate matters. Or check back in some recent NALP reports. The percentage of law school graduates obtaining nine-month jobs in law firms fell from 50.9% in 2010 to 45.9% in 2011. Maybe we could have avoided this whole law school crisis thing if we’d just “rounded up” the 2011 number to 50%.

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