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127 Wall Street, New Haven , CT 06520-8215 | Google Map

T: 203.432.4995 | F: n/a | www.law.yale.edu

Founded 1843 | ABA Accredited 1923

The first law schools were located in law offices where students learned the law by serving as apprentices to senior attorneys. Yale Law School emerged as part of this tradition. Its origins date back to the early 1800s, when Seth Staples, a New Haven lawyer, trained apprentices in his office. By 1810, Staples’s office became an active law school, which he eventually affiliated with the school of his former student, Samuel Hitchcock. By 1843, the school began issuing the first Yale Law School degrees.

Located in urban New Haven, CT, between New York City and Boston, Yale Law School has consistently held the #1 position since the US News and World Report began issuing its rankings. The law school prides itself on its intimate size, with a faculty-to-student ratio that consistently hovers between 6:1 to 7.5:1 and an average class size of fewer than 20 students. Each year, Yale Law School offers its students over 180 courses together with independent research and writing projects, public interest activities and clinical placements.

NOTABLE ALUMNI

Larry Lucchino, President and CEO of the Boston Red Sox Tim & Nina Zagat, Founders of the Zagat Surveys Hillary Rodham Clinton, US Secretary of State Sonia Sotomayor, US Supreme Court Justice Josh Lyman, Fictional Deputy White House Chief of Staff on NBC's The West Wing

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Rankings

POLL OF POLLS#1

SELECTIVITY RANK#1

US NEWS

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Asha Rangappa

BETTER KNOW A DEAN

"[P]eople should be very careful what they decide to write on a discussion board. Remember, I was an FBI agent ..." - Asha Rangappa - Associate Dean of Admissions, Yale Law

December 14, 2009 \\ This is the tenth installment of our 224 part series, Better Know A Dean. Today we posted our interview with Asha Rangappa, Associate Dean for Admissions at Yale Law -- The Fightin' Yalies!

Dean Rangappa graduated from the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs at Princeton University in 1996, and from Yale Law School in 2000. In between, she was a Fulbright Scholar in Bogota, Colombia, where she studied Colombian constitutional reform and its impact on U.S. drug policy in the region. During her time at Yale Law School, she served as a Coker Fellow for Constitutional Law, participated in the Yale-Chile Linkage Program, and founded Yale Law School's first theater troupe, the Court Jesters. Following law school, Dean Rangappa served as a law clerk for the Honorable Juan R. Torruella, U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit in San Juan, Puerto Rico. She then joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a Special Agent, specializing in counterintelligence investigations in New York City from 2002 until 2005 when she returned to Yale Law School as the Assistant Dean of Admissions, becoming Associate Dean in 2007.

AD In preparation for this interview I’ve read through much of your blog and actually read the posts for Bad Idea Jeans twice (one time for my wife), and we were literally rolling on the floor laughing. So, I’m glad you have a sense of humor since I try to channel Stephen Colbert when conducting my interviews with admissions deans; therefore, my first question has to be this:

AdmissionsDean.com – a great place to get information on law school admissions, or the greatest place to get information on law school admissions?
AR I’m not really sure. You’re relatively new and I have to admit that I haven’t spent a whole lot of time on AdmissionsDean, but the site’s layout is great and from what I have read, the content and information seems sound. If it’s OK, I wouldn’t mind reserving my final judgment until I see how you continue to build the site and, more importantly, how prospective students adopt and use it.
AD OK, I see. I’ll just put you down for “greatest place to get information about law school”?
AR Well, that’s not really what I was trying to say. I was . . .
AD Aside from being hilarious and witty, your blog posts are extremely informative and really give readers a glimpse into your decision-making process. What prompted you to start the 203 blog?
AR Well, we noticed that it was a trend among several law schools to create a blog and it seemed like a great way to be able to give a lot of information that, maybe 10 years ago, students would have gotten at LSAC Forums and law school fairs. In recent years, however, we noticed that students are turning more to the Internet to get information about law school admissions. So, we wanted to create a blog with a great format that people wanted to keep coming back to. Therefore, our intent was to personalize it as much as possible. To do that, we created different columns that the people in the admissions office write. For instance, I have a column on the blog called “Ask Asha” and I named it that because I really wanted readers to feel like they can reach out to a real person who will, in turn, answer their questions personally as opposed to receiving a form letter response from a faceless being at some large institution. So, I hope that that comes through with my posts.
AD Do you attend LSAC Forums and law school fairs?
AR I don’t personally attend every law school forum anymore. The recruiting season is so busy and so compressed that I just can’t be at every single event, but we do always have a YLS representative in attendance -- usually someone from the admissions office and/or a second or third-year law student who can answer general admissions questions and also give insights about student life at Yale.
Yale Law - LATEST POSTS
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Yale law shows that it has a sense of humor
Last Post: 03.22.2010 12:14 pm Last Posting By: Coop Posts: 1 Views: 141

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