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Innovation Weekend Program - TaxProf Blog

Seton Hall Law's Weekend Program featured in Faculty Lounge and TaxProf Blog


Recently, I raised questions about whether some schools might be exploiting their part-time students, noting that at many law schools, the admissions credentials for part-time students were far lower than for their full-time students, in some cases, dipping dangerously into the high-risk pool of applicants.

Seton Hall was one of the schools that I identified that had a large disparity in the quality of their full-time and part-time classes.  While Seton Hall had very respectable numbers for their full-time entering class in 2016 (LSAT 75/50/25 of 161/157/155),  their 2016 part-time class was not nearly as strong, at 155/150/147.  UGPAs were also much lower:  3.69/3.40/3.07 for full-time vs. 3.46/3.13/2.95.  This was a consistent pattern at Seton Hall for the past several years.

After my column, I learned that for the 2017 entering class Seton Hall had changed the structure of their part-time program from an evening program to a weekend program.

The change was prompted, in significant part, by concerns by the faculty and school leadership over the significantly weaker credentials, and the significantly weaker performance (higher attrition rate, lower bar passage rate) of the part-time students.  Also, according to Seton Hall Dean Kathleen Boozang, the part-time program was no longer serving very well the school’s intended mission of providing an opportunity for working adults to attend law school.  Many of the part-time students were recent college graduates who were just taking fewer credits and working part-time, as opposed to older students with full-time jobs seeking to make a career change.

The result of changing to a weekend program not only attracted far more of the kind of students that the school was looking for — working adults seeking a career change — but also resulted in far stronger candidates.  The entering class profile for the 2017 part-time division was quite impressive: 158/156/152  3.61/3.28/3.06.  The LSAT profile was identical to the full-time entering class, with GPAs just slightly lower, about .10.  And they even managed to grow the class from 37 in 2016 to 43 in 2017. 

I applaud Dean Boozang and Seton Hall for taking a risk and adopting this innovative approach.  Unfortunately, just when the ABA needs to be paying more attention to this issue, the ABA stopped requiring law schools to differentiate their admissions data, so it is no longer possible to compare the admissions profiles of the part-time and full-time entering classes, and law schools may be able to hide the weak numbers for their part-time students. But if a law school could grow its part-time class, while increasing the quality of its students, thereby also decreasing its attrition rate and increasing its bar passage rate, the school would be foolish not to consider doing so.  Especially in major metropolitan areas where there are several law schools competing for evening students, law schools that are having difficulty attracting a sufficient number of well-qualified applicants for their part-time evening program should consider changing to a weekend program.

 

Orginally posted here from The Faculty Lounge and TaxProf Blog