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Transfer schools:

The University of Denver Sturm College of Law (ranked 69th)


Full-time students paid $35,460 in tuition for 2009-2010, while part-timers paid $26,004. Room & board hovers around $10,000 on average; and book costs, combined with miscellaneous fees typically amount to $6,000 or more. Total cost-of-attendance is somewhere around $52,700 for fulltime students and $42,700 for part-timers.

Loyola University Chicago School of Law (ranked 87th)


$36,290 per year, and that doesn't include misc. student fees, health insurance, books, living expenses and all of the other costs associated with attending law school. Factoring those in, one will more likely find a figure approaching $57,000 per year, due to Chicago's high cost of living.

University of Minnesota $25,324 in yearly tuition, while non-resident students will face $34,72 University of Nebraska $26,600 Santa Clara University School of Law (Silicon Valley) Univ. of Oregon (Eugene) out-of-staters pay $27,818this is certainly a plus, considering that many state schools have a much larger gap between resident and non-resident rates. Room & board in the Eugene area is also pleasantly low: the schools website reports that the average student spends only about $8,000 per year in this category Michigan State (rank 82) $33,785 Rutgers Newark NJ (ranked 82) $30,307

the school is known to waive out-of-state status even for first year students who move to New Jersey $21,300 on campus housing 8,600 to $10,50 Loyala (ranked 67) $36,290 University of Houston (ranked 57) $28,440 Pepperdine (ranked 49) ~39000 Wake Forest Law (Winston-salem) $35,450, $8500 for room and board UIUC ( $40,000 Estimated living/travel expenses, books and health insurance: $19,673

15. Texas ~15 15. UCLA ~30-40 17. Vandy ~25 18. USC ~5-10 19. WUSTL ~50 20. Emory ~30 20. Boston University ~5-10 (according to Coolgrnmen, BU took about 20 people in 2011) 23. UIUC ~30-40 (univ. of Illinois) 30. Fordham ~30-40 39. UC Hastings ~15-20 45. American ~65 52. Florida State ~60 55. Case Western ~30 71. Loyola (Los Angeles) ~35 71. Miami ~20 77. Rutgers, Camden ~45 85. Santa Clara ~25-30

15. Texas ~15 15. UCLA ~30-40 17. Vandy ~25 18. USC ~5-10 19. WUSTL ~50 20. Emory ~30 20. Boston University ~5-10 (according to Coolgrnmen, BU took about 20 people in 2011) 23. UIUC ~30-40 30. Fordham ~30-40 39. UC Hastings ~15-20 45. American ~65 52. Florida State ~60 55. Case Western ~30 71. Loyola (Los Angeles) ~35 71. Miami ~20 77. Rutgers, Camden ~45 85. Santa Clara ~25-30 If you want to think transfer friendly, GULC tops the list, which has about 100 students transferring in every year (it must accept a lot more too). Other transfer friendly schools in the T14 include NYU, Columbia, Berkeley, and Michigan.

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