Reviews

Overall rating

star star star star star
3.6 49 reviews

Dane artis

star star star star star
10 Jan, 2020
Doesn’t care about its students at auburn hills location! Never closes when ice storms or bad weather comes, glad they are closing. Lansing is a good location
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Mohammed said

star star star star star
08 Nov, 2019
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Charles sanders (chuck sanders)

star star star star star
06 Nov, 2019
Thank you Cooley for letting me into law school. Im now a licensed attorney in Texas. I would not have been in this position with Cooley law school.
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Z s

star star star star star
21 Oct, 2019
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Alex zilinski

star star star star star
09 Jul, 2019
Though I have not attended this school I believe it is funny that some negative reviews are simply attacks on Michael Cohen. One bad attorney graduates from here and it's a bad school. Here's a news flash, bad attorneys graduate from every law school imagainable, quit being incompetent.
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Justin mills

star star star star star
30 Mar, 2019
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Charles lundy

star star star star star
27 Feb, 2019
A lawyer from this school committed perjury and broke attorney client privilege. I expect this law school will shut down soon. Go anywhere else
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Rc wiesenmayer ii

star star star star star
06 Jan, 2019
I am a graduate of the Hooker class of 1992. My experience at Cooley Law school was very valuable and rewarding. I am a trial lawyer practicing for more than 25 years. The trail workshop classes, moot court, and the 60+ elder law clinic provided me with real life experience that allowed me to hit the ground running after graduation. I would highly recommend WMU Law.
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Insaf

star star star star star
12 Aug, 2018
I graduated TMCLS in 1997. Passed the bar first time, and scored high enough on the MultiState exam that Washington, D.C. invited me to be a member of their bar, which I did. Then I practiced law for many years, and afterwords worked for the U.S. govt (Dept of State, USAID, DoD) and did very interesting and rewarding things. I am now 55 and semi retired raising 3 young children. Without Cooley, I very likely would not have achieved as much as I have. So all those Cooley haters are probably former students who couldn't handle the high educational standards of Cooley.
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Victor renfro

star star star star star
22 Jul, 2018
I came to know five grads, four who ended up in Virginia and one in New York state. Two ended up in Fortune 500 head offices, one as an Assistant County Prosecutor, one in in a law office of about 4 or 5 lawyers, one in a NY State commission on disabilities. It was very challenging & cost money but they are very pleased.
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Justin call

star star star star star
08 May, 2018
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Lake girl (windlass)

star star star star star
04 May, 2018
I was in the first day school graduating class of Cooley in 1976. My three children and late former husband watched proudly as I crossed the stage to accept the diploma achieving a dream I had not thought possible. For then, women in law, and were a rarity and with children almost non existent Though my lsat scores were high, as a commuter and mother of three, the 8 am to noon schedule allowed an opportunity that meshed with my responsibilities unlike the spread out class schedules of other Michigan schools. There were others in the class combining school with work or other responsibilities. Many of the professors were demanding and accomplished such as Lieutenant Governor and later Supreme Court Justice Brickley, Justice Fitzgerald and Professor Needham. The expectations were challenging and not all met them. But Cooley gave us an opportunity which other schools did not. We, that is, most of my classmates not only passed the bar but ranked above most other schools as I recall and most became not only good lawyers and some distinguished. Cooley alumni include state and federal confessional representatives, a governor, state appellate and trial judges as well as federal. I served as an Assistant Attorney General with an approximate 98% win rate which included high profile cases where I was opposed by teams of prominent counsel from "white shoe" firms. The demanding expectations of Professors Needham, Brickley and others served me well in meeting the challenges faced during my career. As an Alumni, I have participated in ethics forums required of incoming students. These will be schooled in high ethical expectations unlike what I sadly and at times shockingly experienced of opposing counsel who were graduates of more prestigious institutions. Though Cooley admits so called borderline applicants, I applaud their continuing willingness to give them the opportunity that other schools do not. Those that are worthy will succeed and others will at least have been given a chance to try.
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