The new associate hiring picture at large law firms improved for the third straight year in 2014, but that growth wasn't due to firms enlarging the size of the first-year associate classes. Instead, a smaller cohort of new law graduates meant that a higher percentage of them could land associate jobs at the largest 250 law firms in the country, even though those firms hired roughly the same number of new associates as in 2013.

We've ranked the top 50 law schools by percentage of 2014 juris doctors who took jobs at the largest 250 firms by lawyer head count—as identified in The National Law Journal's annual survey of the nation's 350 largest law firms. We also identified the schools that saw the most alumni promoted to partner, and highlighted the 20 schools that outperform their U.S. News & World Report ranking when it comes to large firm hiring. We take an even deeper dive into our annual law school report in our special interactive feature. —Karen Sloan

COLUMBIA LEADS IN SENDING GRADS INTO BIG LAW
It wasn't a return to the go-go days before the recession, but first-year associate hiring picture improved at the nation's largest law firms during 2014. Columbia Law School retained its place as the top provider of law graduates hired by those big firms, and the University of Pennsylvania jumped from fifth to second place on our annual Go-To Law Schools list.