"Law students in the US invest up to $100,000 in their education – and
if they don't get a job at the end of it they can feel cheated.
Are law schools misleading potential students about the value of a JD (professional doctorate in law)? That's the argument that a handful of New York-based law grads from New York Law School, Hofstra and Brooklyn Law
are making in a New York state court. They claim that the schools fudge
postgraduate employment rates. They cite one school claiming that 90%
of students are employed after graduation, when according to the
complaints, only 40% have jobs that require a law degree and a number of
students work in temporary jobs at the law school itself, which boots
employment numbers."
aqui.
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