Bowen a Top 5 School for Black Law Students
The UALR William H. Bowen School of Law has been named one of the southern region’s Top Five Law Schools for Black Students, according to On Being A Black Lawyer, a blog and media enterprise begun to promote the causes and contributions of African-American attorneys.
- Cost – Cost is measured by the 2011 annual tuition data provided by the American Bar Association (ABA) and Law School Admissions Council (LSAC). For public law schools, resident-tuition figures are used.
- Placement – Employment rates are based on the number of JD graduates working full time in a legal or JD-advantaged job. Data is adjusted to take into account the percentage of black law students at each law school.
- Distinguished black alumni – This figure incorporates schools attended by OBABL’s Power 100. Law school websites and other sources also play a role.
- Selectivity – This measure combines LSAT and GPA data from the 2011 ABA and LSAC figures for all full-time and part-time entering JD students.
- Black student population – Figures from the 2011 annual demographic data provided by the ABA and LSAC.
- Local legal job access – This measure incorporates the number of state and district courts, appeals courts, federal public defender offices, state capitals, and National Law Journal 250 firms.
- Local cost of living –This measure uses the Kiplinger Index to determine the cost of living in law school cities.
- Local black population –This measure uses the 2010 U.S. Census to determine the percentage of African Americans in law school cities.
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