The 10 Toughest Law Schools To Get Into
The Princeton Review just released its 2015 guide to law schools, which includes lists of the "Best Professors," "Most Competitive Students," and of course, "The Toughest to Get Into."
To create the list, The Princeton Review surveyed 19,500 current law students and administrators from 169 schools. The Review also compiled LSAT scores, undergraduate GPAs of the first-year class, acceptance rates, and enrollment rates.
Here are the most competitive law schools in the U.S., according to the Princeton Review:
- Yale University - Law School (Acceptance Rate: 9%; Total Enrollment: 625)
- Stanford University - School of Law (Acceptance Rate: 10%; Total Enrollment: 574)
- Harvard University (Acceptance Rate: 16%; Total Enrollment: 1,741)
- University of California, Berkeley - Berkeley Law (Acceptance Rate: 10%; Total Enrollment: 916)
- Duke University - School of Law (Acceptance Rate: 19%; Total Enrollment: 629)
- University of Pennsylvania - Law School (Acceptance Rate: 17%; Total Enrollment: 786)
- University of Virginia - School of Law (Acceptance Rate: 18%; Total Enrollment: 1,048)
- University of Chicago - Law School (Acceptance Rate: 20%; Total Enrollment: 612)
- Columbia University - School of Law (Acceptance Rate: 21%; Total Enrollment: 1,250)
- The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill - School of Law (Acceptance Rate: 18%; Total Enrollment: 737)