Southern Law Center reports roughly 64% employment ten months after graduation, below where a comfortable decision lives, and a number that obligates you to investigate before you enroll. Soft headline rates are sometimes a geography story, sometimes a category story, and sometimes exactly what they look like. The 509 disclosure tells you which, and this page shows you how to read it.
MetricFigureContextEmployment rate (10 months)~64%The headline blendPrimary placementBaton Rouge and LouisianaWhere the pipeline pointsNetwork strengthHBCU, LA in-state, civil lawStrongest for matching plans
Taken literally: ten months after graduation, 64% of the class had a job, any kind, any duration, any funder. The figure that should drive your decision is narrower: full-time, long-term, bar-passage-required employment as a share of all graduates, because that category and only that category means practicing law. The rest of the blend, part-time, JD-advantage, school-funded, is context worth reading and discounting.
This is not Southern Law Center being evasive; it is the standard format every school reports in, which is exactly why the ABA requires a disclosure that lets you take the blend apart.
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: cross-reference the employment summary against class size over the same years. A “rising” placement rate over a shrinking class can mean fewer jobs, better ratio, arithmetic doing the work that recruiting didn’t.
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, Baton Rouge and Louisiana. 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.
Around 64% report some form of employment at ten months. The lawyer-specific figure, full-time, long-term, bar-required over the whole class, is the one worth your attention, and it lives in the 509.
Primarily Baton Rouge and Louisiana, with particular strength in HBCU, LA in-state, civil law. Placement power is concentrated, a strength if that geography is your plan, a discount if it isn’t.
They do, and the 509 isolates them on a dedicated line so you can decide what they mean. Read them as institutional support for graduates, valuable to those in them, and distinct from market hiring when you evaluate the school.
Employment data is the closest thing this industry has to ground truth, and reading it well is a fifteen-minute skill most applicants never build, they accept the brochure number and spend three years discovering what it blended. You are training to be a lawyer. Start with the document: pull the 509, find the real category, and make the decision on evidence. That habit will outlast the application season.