bahbehbah wrote:
Well I don't think I misquoted you. You spoke of "rankings" in a very dismissive way, not bothering to read other people's opinions, but then authoritatively stated the 3 schools you feel belong in a "top tier", and then concluded by saying that "tiers" is a concept based on the assumption that you want to work on Bay st. Yes there are and should be other considerations, but you didn't mention any of those; that's not my misquote at work.
I'm dismissive of rankings in Canada because they tend to be more misleading than beneficial in the way the majority of them are constructed.
When based on logical standards and for clearly measured objectives, I think rankings do serve a legitimate purpose. I can think back to undergrad where my school wrote a letter to Macleans (or rather, more precisely, signed a letter), refusing to provide more information for their rankings. Their reasoning, in this open letter, was that the methodology was misleading. To tell patients of a hospital that it was the 5th best, when it was ranked 1st in OB/GYN and 10th in Cancer was at best misleading and at worst, harmful. The same applies to schools.
With respect to the schools, they aren't "my opinion", so much as the general consensus that I've heard from lawyers, seen on Macleans (for all their flaws), and from other sources. Personally, I think Osgoode is overrated, but, my opinion matters little. I was simply trying to provide an accurate portrayal.
As to the claim that I didn't mention other considerations, I never held myself out to be providing an exhaustive list, my apologies if you interpreted my post as being such. It was not the intent. The reality is that at, what is now 4:30 in the morning, I can think of more important things to do than articulate every possible thing that enters into consideration. I decided to answer a few threads before bed, because it's a nice change of pace from working on OCI related material.
If my answers are not as complete as they could otherwise be if I was not tired, my apologies.
bahbehbah wrote:
All I did was point out that you can't reconcile a "tier" system that is based on Bay St placement with the fact that Osgoode doesn't do as well on Bay St as a school such as Queen's. But if your "tier" system does in fact include all sorts of other considerations, then the inconsistency disappears and your 3 schools can be in the top tier as you see fit. And all I said about McGill was that many of their students don't bother with Bay St, so I'm not sure how your point about McGill's strong placement at US firms (largely a thing of the past, much like Osgoode's reputation...zing!) is in any way related to that.
Queens has its own problems. It does poorly at Supreme Court Clerkships for students and does not produce much in the way of legal scholarship (among its Faculty). Despite this, it does seem to place well on Bay Street (and elsewhere around the country), though one could ask the legitimate question if this is related to the education one receives or the reputation it has achieved... Which, if anything, is as long and distinguished (as a University) as Osgoode is (as a Law School).
One could also ask if it matters, one way or the other, or is the plum job all we care about? That said, at least where the caliber of Professors are concerned, I believe you will receive a better education, all things being equal, at Osgoode, than at Queens. I could be wrong. I have not attended either school.
With respect to McGill & Bay Street, the point I was trying to make, was the placement of graduates at top firms. Frankly I'm not sure I can bother to argue if you wish to say ending up in downtown New York or Boston is somehow "worse" because it's not Bay Street? The anecdotal evidence, which, while not conclusive is still interesting, suggests that McGill is still placing well outside of its market with good to great firms. That seems like a reasonable point to bring up when discussing why some might consider McGill a superior school to Queens.
On the issue of, Osgoode's reputation, I agree, by the by, that its reputation has a substantial role in how it is perceived. However, I think that same statement is true of Queens and McGill (at least in the program I was enrolled in before law school; one in which historically, both of those schools were renowned as powerhouses in), at least in my own experience with their students at competitions involving them and other schools. However, if you were to go to Harvard or Oxford, for example, I think you'd find the same sort of thing. The reality is that the modern generations of these schools are, while still incredible, not nearly as separated from their peers as they perhaps once were. It's naive to pretend otherwise. That doesn't mean there isn't a difference though, it just means its not what it once was.
bahbehbah wrote:
I'm not here to disparage Osgoode, it has a well earned and very high reputation in many fields, constitutional law being one of them because of some of the faculty members you just mentioned. But naming 3 profs from Osgoode and then concluding that the breadth of faculty at Osgoode is of a significantly higher calibre than Queen's...well as before, that's just inaccurate. I'd rather have Don Stuart teach me criminal law. And Bill Flanagan teach me international trade. And Nick Bala teach me family. Does this make Queen's faculty superior in all these areas? I don't think so.
I wouldn't care if you were disparaging Osgoode. I'm not a student at Osgoode, I have no real stake in the debate.
However, none of the faculty you mentioned rival those at Osgoode. Sorry. Here's why:
1) Almost all Canadian law students take Criminal Law, Property Law, Tort Law, Constitutional Law and Contract Law during their first year of study. No Canadian law school that I can think of requires International Trade or Family Law to graduate (although, I know Dalhousie and Toronto *recommend* Family Law among your courses to varying degrees of fortitude in the recommendation, neither requires it).
2) Peter Hogg, and his book on Constitutional Law, is if memory serves the most cited book by the Supreme Court of Canada. It is a resource for law students across the country. The same cannot be said of any of the professors at Queens you mention.
3) I currently have sitting on my desk Constitutional Law, by Patrick J. Monahan. I do not have (and I did take) a criminal law book by Don Stuart. Why not? If he is such an expert professor, why do other schools not read what he has to say?
4) With respect to Professor Hutchinson, I admittedly can only defer to his teaching ability as being superb. His publications, you (nor I, if I hadn't looked them up), would not be familiar with. On the other hand, there is a reason he was elected to the Royal Society of Canada in 2004 and recently a Visiting Professor at Harvard.
Believe what you would like, but, the caliber is not the same. The professors you mention might be very, very good.. and by all means, Professor Bala (from what his bio says... it's too late in the morning to read up on all three) seems like a great guy... but Osgoode's are still, better still.