April 26, 2024
U.S. News Releases Its Latest, Disputed Rankings of Law and Medical Schools

U.S. News Releases Its Latest, Disputed Rankings of Law and Medical Schools

U.S. News & World Report finally released its annual rankings of top law and medical schools on Thursday, after boycotts by law and medical schools, disputes over methodology, and a delay of weeks.

A few schools shuffled positions, but the schools at the top of the new list of law schools seem to be much the same as last year, with many familiar names — Stanford, Yale, Chicago, Duke, Harvard and New York University.

Yale, which led the boycott, retained its No. 1 position, though in a tie this year with Stanford. Columbia, which participated in the boycott, dropped to eighth place from fourth.

There were some big shifts among the lower ranks, as a result of a new ranking methodology. Wake Forest in North Carolina jumped 15 spots to be tied at No. 22, from No. 37 last year. Marquette University in Milwaukee climbed to No. 34, tied with Texas Tech, from No. 71 before.

Among medical schools, most that were in the top ten research list last year remained there in 2023-24.

The top three medical schools are Harvard, Johns Hopkins and the University of Pennsylvania. Joining the top ten: Vanderbilt, Weill Cornell and Washington University in St. Louis.

New York University dropped to No. 10 from No. 2 last year.

After criticizing U.S. News’s rankings for years, many elite law and medical schools decided to boycott the 2023-24 rankings by refusing to hand over data, saying that the rankings were unreliable and unfair and had skewed education priorities.

Yale Law School, the first to drop out, said that the U.S. News ranking methodology did not give enough weight to programs “that support public interest careers, champion need-based aid, and welcome working-class students into the profession.” As a result, Yale argued, the rankings effectively penalized law schools that emphasize that work, and deterred other schools from focusing on that work.

Faced with several dozen schools declining to participate, U.S. News & World Report went on a listening tour last year to develop a new ranking methodology. For law schools, fully 58 percent of a school’s ranking is now based on outcomes — how many graduating students pass the bar and get jobs — a substantial increase from prior years.

The new ranking of medical schools for research also used new methodology, and included an evaluation of faculty resources, the academic achievements of entering students and research productivity.

U.S. News said that for the law and medical schools that declined to provide data, it filled in the blanks using publicly available information.

Despite the overhaul, an early preview of the 2023-24 rankings, released on April 21, ran into another wave of criticism, prompting a delay in the release of the final list.

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