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interests / alt.education / Before Pulling Out of Rankings, Yale Law School Took a Hit on Key Metric

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o Before Pulling Out of Rankings, Yale Law School Took a Hit on Key MetricDe Lusions

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Before Pulling Out of Rankings, Yale Law School Took a Hit on Key Metric

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https://www.novabbs.com/interests/article-flat.php?id=1143&group=alt.education#1143

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From: delusi...@yale.edu (De Lusions)
Newsgroups: talk.politics.guns,alt.education,misc.legal,alt.society.liberalism,sac.politics
Subject: Before Pulling Out of Rankings, Yale Law School Took a Hit on Key Metric
Date: Mon, 12 Dec 2022 00:04:11 -0000 (UTC)
Organization: Mixmin
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 by: De Lusions - Mon, 12 Dec 2022 00:04 UTC

Amid controversies over free speech, the school's 'peer assessment' score
pushed it below the competition

Yale Law School dean Heather Gerken is framing the school's decision to
pull out of the U.S. News & World Report law-school rankings as an
altruistic one, arguing that the "profoundly flawed" rankings
"disincentivize programs that support public interest careers."

But a closer look at those rankings suggests that Yale, which has over the
past year been the locus of a fierce debate about free speech and drawn
unwanted attention for its response to campus controversies, may have had
a selfish reason to jump ship. The elite law school was starting to slip
on one of the key indicators that determine a law school's overall
ranking, according to U.S. News & World Report�s published methodology,
raising questions about how long it would continue to occupy the number-
one slot.

The "peer assessment" score is a measure of how deans and tenured
professors across the country rate a law school's quality on a scale of 1
to 5. Accounting for 25 percent of each school's overall rank, this metric
is the single most important factor in U.S. News & World Report law-school
rankings�and one reason why Yale consistently lands at the top of them.

For many years, the law school's peer assessment score hovered between a
4.8 and a 4.9, which meant it usually tied or exceeded Harvard and
Stanford's scores. But in March 2022�amid the free speech controversies,
including the administration's abuse and intimidation of a second-year law
student, that thrust the top-ranked school into the national
spotlight�Yale's peer assessment score dropped to 4.6, its lowest in over
a decade.

Though the drop didn't dislodge Yale from its number-one position overall,
it did put the school behind Harvard and Stanford in the reputational
rankings, a sign that the law school's perch was more precarious than it
once seemed. Further hits to the peer assessment score could have pushed
Yale to second or third place for the first time since U.S. News & World
Report began ranking law schools, shattering a major source of its
prestige.

A few hours after Yale�s announcement, Harvard Law said that it would also
be pulling out of the rankings, a decision it claimed had been in the
works for "several months." The school saw a slight drop in its peer
assessment score, from 4.8 in 2021 to 4.7 in 2022.

Yale Law School did not respond to a request for comment.

In recent months, Gerken has struggled to fend off a series of public
relations disasters related to the political climate on campus and the
administration's response to it.

Between September and October, 14 federal judges, including James Ho of
the 5th Circuit and Elizabeth Branch of the 11th Circuit, said they would
no longer hire clerks from Yale Law School, citing concerns about free
speech and intellectual diversity. They pointed to a September 2021
incident in which administrators pressured second-year law student Trent
Colbert to apologize for using the term "traphouse" in an email, as well
as an incident from early March in which hundreds of students disrupted a
bipartisan panel on civil liberties.

The clerkship boycott prompted Yale Law to issue a statement affirming its
"commitment to the free and unfettered exchange of ideas," which outlined
a number of steps the law school was taking to protect free speech�a tacit
indication that administrators, including Gerken, are aware they have a
problem on their hands.

Gerken's statement about the school's decision to pull out of the rankings
did not address the drop in its peer assessment score. Instead, she
blasted an "ill-conceived" system that "stands squarely in the way of
progress," announcing that the "rankings process is undermining the core
commitments of the legal profession." As a result, she said, "we will no
longer participate."

Published under: Campus, Feature, Free Speech, Yale, yale law school

https://freebeacon.com/campus/before-pulling-out-of-rankings-yale-law-
school-took-a-hit-on-key-metric/

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