The students recognize that it is a kind of "bait and switch" game.
Nobody knows exactly how many law school students nationwide lose scholarships each year — no oversight body tallies that figure — but what’s clear is that American law schools have quietly gone on a giveaway binge in the last decade. In 2009, the most recent year for which the American Bar Association has data, 38,000 of 145,000 law school students — more than one in four — were on merit scholarships. The total tab for all schools in all three years: more than $500 million.The article emphasizes that the merit scholarship money is used as a competitive weapon among schools attempting to climb in their U.S. News and World Report rankings, rankings which rely heavily on the statistical character of incoming students.
It’s a huge sum, particularly when you realize that merit scholarships were exceptionally rare at law schools a mere generation ago. But given that many students lose their grants after the first year, the question is this: What exactly are law schools buying with all of that money?
I classify it as an example of the rise of the scam-economy, because it is an example of deliberately exposing people, who can not bear much financial risk, to increased financial risk.
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