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how is that possible?melsc said:A girl in my school got into Oxford Law, I am green with envy![]()
Awww you forgot UOW, my school!melsc said:In terms of uai: (which is an indication of demand I guess)
USYD
UNSW
UTS
Macquarie
ANU
UWS
UNE
Did I forget any?
I think perception in the industry is a lot more important than public. But then again marks and extra curriculars are also more important than anything else.MiuMiu said:Awww you forgot UOW, my school!
In terms of percieved prestige I guess it would go
USYD
UNSW
ANU
UTS
And then I think in terms of perception by the general public UOW, UWS and Macquarie would all be about the same. I don't think UNE even really has a reputation.
As I said above, I go to UOW so in ranking the schools above I obviously don't mean that I think UOW is at the bottom of teaching standards, quite the opposite, but in terms of prestige, thats how I see it.
Care to justify this statement?GoodToGo said:Having said that, I know only USYD has a better rep than Macquarie amongst the judiciary.
Macquarie has a strong reptuation amongst judges at the high court, federal and state level. I'm not entirely sure if it's one of these reasons or a combination of all of them.MoonlightSonata said:Care to justify this statement?
what the fuck man!?! when did UTSLSS not have an internal mooting comp!?! >.<GoodToGo said:Judges like mooters and MQ takes mooting seriously, as opposed to say UTS who didn't have an internal mooting comp last year. Macquarie gives academic credit for intervarsity moots more often than any other university (there's a subject called 'National and International mooting', which the uni attaches to any obscure moot they like). The Macquarie intervarsity mooting teams receive a shitload of funding from the law school. The most out of NSW lawschools, and possibly in Australia.
Exactly... just about every uni has an internal mooting comp and if anything, UTS's internal and external mooting comps are some of the more well known and revered... it's always a way bigger deal when the 'teams' from my uni beat UTS than if they beat any other NSW uni....Frigid said:what the fuck man!?! when did UTSLSS not have an internal mooting comp!?! >.<
UTS is a great mooting school. in 2004/2005, this included 5 national victorieshttp://www.uts.edu.au/new/releases/2005/February/25.html, including twice at Harry Gibbshttp://www.law.uts.edu.au/news/news_detail.html?ItemId=2776&ItemDate=2005-11-29.
candy-coat MQ by all means, but do not do so at the expense of other universities, especially if they pwn MQ with less funding and training.![]()
Funding isn't really a good argument as to why it is of a higher quality as services may be given greater funding because they are either high quality or very lacking in the view of the uni board so it could be one of eitherGoodToGo said:All law schools give a different legal education, and the judiciary seem to like the theoretical, critical and interdiscplinary approach at MQ. The focus on the "why's" and "why-nots" as opposed just what law currently is. Heck, our first subject ever is Jurisprudence. In a way they like the non practical background. Our uni started out as a university for the research and teaching of humanities as opposed to UNSW which focused on science/engineering and UTS, which was a tafe. Michael Kirby was chancellor of Macquarie for a number of years.
MQ churn out top tipstaffs.
Mac is the number 1 place for legal history in Australia. There are also 4 scholarly law journals published at MQ, which judges are the patrons of. That kinda stuff seems to matter to them.
The Macquarie intervarsity mooting teams receive a shitload of funding from the law school. The most out of NSW lawschools, and possibly in Australia.
Yes that is the proposition, but I asked for a justification.GoodToGo said:Macquarie has a strong reputation amongst judges at the high court, federal and state level. I'm not entirely sure if it's one of these reasons or a combination of all of them.
Right, your argument is this:GoodToGo said:All law schools give a different legal education, and the judiciary seem to like the theoretical, critical and interdisciplinary approach at MQ. The focus on the "why's" and "why-nots" as opposed just what law currently is. Heck, our first subject ever is Jurisprudence. In a way they like the non practical background. Our uni started out as a university for the research and teaching of humanities as opposed to UNSW which focused on science/engineering and UTS, which was a tafe. Michael Kirby was chancellor of Macquarie for a number of years.
MQ churn out top tipstaffs.
Mac is the number 1 place for legal history in Australia. There are also 4 scholarly law journals published at MQ, which judges are the patrons of. That kinda stuff seems to matter to them.
Judges like mooters and MQ takes mooting seriously, as opposed to say UTS who didn't have an internal mooting comp last year. Macquarie gives academic credit for intervarsity moots more often than any other university (there's a subject called 'National and International mooting', which the uni attaches to any obscure moot they like). The Macquarie intervarsity mooting teams receive a shitload of funding from the law school. The most out of NSW lawschools, and possibly in Australia.
Less students are interested in and end up practicing corporate law from MQ than UNSW/USYD/UTS which I personally think is a negative. In fact MQ absolutely pwned by USYD/UNSW come clerkship time each year.
You have a suppressed premise here: "Other law schools do not." Have you studied at the other law schools? I do not think you can speak for all the other approaches with any great accuracy beyond what you've heard from word-of-mouth. In particular, UNSW is well-known for analysis of social issues and theory interwoven with the substantive law. The uni also offers "Legal Theory" / "Law & Social Theory" courses as mandatory subjects.1. MQ has a theoretical, critical and interdisciplinary approach.
What do you define as "top"? Do you mean skilled? If so, then that is highly subjective. I might just as validly allege that USYD tipstaffs are "top." If you mean that more MQ students are appointed to judges that are higher up in the judiciary than are students from other law schools, then please provide some sort of evidence of this. From personal experience, I've noted many tipstaffs and associates from a variety of institutions.2. MQ churn out top tipstaffs.
You have merely stated this claim without justifying it.3. MQ is the number 1 place for legal history.
Agreed this is a good thing (though I doubt senior judges are reading much of "Journal of International and Comparative Environmental Law").4. MQ has 4 scholarly law journals.
Again, your suppressed premise is that other law schools do not. I cannot speak for other unis, but it has been written above that you are wrong regarding UTS. As for my own uni, UNSW has a very extensive competitions programme. These are all the competitions we run within the uni:5. MQ takes mooting seriously, gives credit for mooting, and funds it well.
You may see it as a negative, but that is not the issue. The issue is the reputation in the judiciary. Do you know how many High Court judges have commercial law backgrounds?6. Less students focus on corporate law at MQ, which you think is a negative.
She went and sat the entrance exam, she got a uai of 99.9 so I assume she was smart enough= Jennifer = said:how is that possible?