At 68%, Gonzaga Law’s headline employment figure is exactly the kind of number that requires decomposition before judgment. Full-time long-term bar-required is the category that means “working as a lawyer”; everything else, part-time, JD-advantage, school-funded, is context. The 509 separates them, and so will this page.
MetricFigureContextEmployment rate (10 months)~68%The headline blendPrimary placementSpokane and WashingtonWhere the pipeline pointsNetwork strengthSpokane and Pacific Northwest market, JesuitStrongest for matching plans
It means 68% of the class reported some employment at the ten-month mark, full-time and part-time, bar-required and not, market-funded and school-funded, all counted together. The number you actually want is one level down: the share in full-time, long-term, bar-passage-required positions. That category is what “working as a lawyer” means; everything else is context.
A headline employment rate is a marketing number until you have seen the denominator, not an accusation aimed at Gonzaga Law, but the structure of how every school reports, which is precisely why the ABA forces a standardized disclosure.
Read the 509 employment summary the way you will someday read a deal disclosure, categories first, headline last. The category that means “lawyer” is full-time, long-term, bar-passage-required, taken as a fraction of all graduates. School-funded roles get separated out (real work, not market demand). JD-advantage gets read with one eyebrow raised. And every figure gets a map: where are these jobs, and is that where your life is going? The blend exists for marketing; the breakdown exists for you.
Withheld Tip: the most honest data source on placement is not a document, it is two or three graduates from the last two classes who targeted your market and practice area. Ten months of someone’s real search outweighs any percentage, and most will tell you the truth if you ask directly.
Before any statistic matters, answer the location question, because the school cannot. Placement networks are physical: employers who interview on campus, alumni who return calls, here, Spokane and Washington. A school’s machinery compounds for students moving toward it and drags on students moving away. So fix the destination first and choose the vehicle second; the reverse order is how strong students end up with strong degrees in the wrong city.
About 68% at the ten-month mark, counting every category together. Treat that as the ceiling of the claim, not the substance of it, the bar-required, full-time share in the 509 is the number that describes working as a lawyer.
Primarily Spokane and Washington, with particular strength in spokane and Pacific Northwest market, Jesuit. Read the geography as infrastructure: alumni, employers, and on-campus recruiting all live where the school’s history lives, and your outcomes will too.
Yes, which is precisely why the 509 lists them on their own line. Count them as support, not demand: useful bridges for the graduates in them, and a deduction from the headline for anyone evaluating the school’s market pull.
The discipline this page teaches, decompose the headline, locate the geography, verify across years, is the same discipline the career itself will demand. Treat the school’s employment summary as your first case file. The applicants who read it that way tend to end up on the right side of the statistics they once scrutinized.