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Old 21-06-2020, 09:58 PM
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Actually the statistics show otherwise - LSE has a 6% admission rate and a cap of less than 20 Singaporean students versus a school that takes 200+ a year. Which is more selective? Look at the numbers.

So selective, I'm not so sure. Prestige arguments, I'm also not so sure if you look at the pedigree of who graduated from LSE vs who graduated from NUS, in Singapore and internationally. NUS makes good Singapore lawyers at the top 5-10% (and not the average and bottom). LSE makes Singapore and international lawyers and a lot more than just legal drones.

The reason why there is a lack of representation in Singapore is that LSE takes in 10% of NUS cohort per year or less. A good proportion stay in the UK, the rest come back. They also go on to do things other than law (the benefit of an LSE degree).

But the practice of Singapore law, NUS. This is a fact of utility rather than prestige, because it is 4 years SG law vs 3 years UK law. Should the argument be reversed, LSE would be more prestigious to an international law firm doing UK law by virtue of having 3 years LLB in UK law, which is a stupid comparison.

Sure arguments can be made either way. But the fact is you're 100% not prejudiced locally by choosing LSE. Two people have already given you the statistics, so you are able to make an informed choice. However, no one also has refuted the fact that you need to be top 10-20% of NUS to work at an international firm at the outset.

Second, half (?) of the NUS batch gets a 2.2 (correct me if I'm wrong). Take that into account. At LSE, Oxford and Cambridge you won't have to cannibalise your own classmates.

Local connections, yes. This is important.

Covid - yes, stay in Singapore.
Just want to correct the part about 2.1/2.2, they've changed it now so I think more people are able to get 2.1s. As long as you get a B average (which in previous years has been calculated as around a 3.4-3.5 because they use your actual score for subjects to calculate, not the GPA for each subject) you can get a 2.1. It's still of course never easy wherever you go be it NUS or LSE, and NUS law is not a total breeze, but there's room for mistakes and room to improve in both. There are many cases where people don't do as well at the start, but manage to pull it up, and life's all okay.

Agree that arguments can be made either way and both have their merits I think if you can do well in NUS, the connections that you get are good enough even if LSE may have a lower admission rate.
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