In many ways, Suffolk University Law School is emblematic of recent changes in the legal profession. Like most other law schools, it saw a steep decline in applications after the Great Recession burst the Big Law, billable hour bubble. And its employment outcomes reflect the difficulties students have faced finding a footing on the traditional associate-partner track career path.
But Suffolk is also embracing — and making — change, including in the way law schools determine who should get the chance to become a lawyer in the first place.
The school recently began to study whether GRE scores accurately predict law ...
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