REUTERS — Law School Transparency was a thorn in the side of law schools when it launched in 2009, criticizing what it said was misleading graduate employment data and calling for changes in how schools report student outcomes. Now, the non-profit is joining the legal education establishment. The Law School Admission Council, which makes the Law School Admission Test and serves as an application hub for U.S. law schools, said Wednesday it has acquired Law School Transparency and hired its executive director Kyle McEntee. The deal was a charitable asset assignment, meaning no money exchanged hands between the two non-profits, McEntee said. While now focused mainly on educating would-be lawyers about law schools and the profession, Law School Transparency’s early focus was improving data on law graduate employment. It and other advocates successfully pushed the American Bar Association to collect and report more detailed information on the types of jobs grads get, and police the accuracy of those numbers.