Perception of the school? Is it worth it? Any info will help
The more important question is what do you hope to do in the legal field? If your goal is to work at a big firm, then you need to get a degree from the best school you possibly can even if that takes some sacrifices (paying more, moving to a new area, waiting a year or transferring, etc). If you're just looking at our state, the top school is UF, hands down; then I personally would say Stetson, then Miami/FSU tied as next tier just below Stetson, then everyone else significantly below that. There are a couple big firms in my area that won't even interview you if you went to law school in Florida and it wasn't Stetson or UF. Big firms are definitely resume whores, as someone said above. But no school in the state other than UF carries any weight nationally; and honestly UF doesn't that much either. UF in particular and also somewhat Stetson just have some panache in Florida.
But if you don't want to work at a big firm, then graduating from a good law school is not that important; or, better put, other factors should control more. I can tell you from first hand experience that in the solo practitioner world, none of us give a rat's *** what the name of the school is on your JD. It doesn't even 1% reflect how good of a lawyer you are. I knew I wanted to have my own practice as working at a big firm is the Seventh Layer of **** to me, so I selected a law school based primarily on location as I knew odds were very high that wherever I went to law school is where I'd settle down and start a family. And I was right. That's why I didn't go to Stetson even though I was accepted there. Stetson is a good law school for FL but I thought Gulfport was an absolute dump. I could never have envisioned my family living there.
I ended up at a small school in Jacksonville called Florida Coastal. I got a scholarship, I liked the campus, it was very modern, I was drawn to all the first-hand experience programs they offered (something that is exponentially more valuable than GPA/LSAT/law school when you look for your first law job... when I hire these days, I honestly don't even care where the candidates got their degree, I care how much real world experience they have as that tells me how quickly they'll be able to contribute for me / how much I'll have to hold their hand). My experience there was fantastic! I had great profs, I did really well there academically (I also was older and married which factored into that big time), I learned the basics of legal theory really well, I got a lot of good hands on experience, and most importantly, I built a strong local network. All of those factors got me where I am today, and my personal career path wouldn't have been a single step different even if I had Harvard written on my law degree. (Though as a side note, Coastal has really gone to sh-t since my time there and is very close to losing their accreditation - yet further evidence of why your law school has very little bearing unless you're trying to compete in The Resume ***** World).
Give some serious thought to what you want to actually do in the legal industry before you choose a law school. If the goal isn't big firm life, then my advice is to give other factors much more weight (location, cost, when you can get in, field-specific programs, where you already have a network built, where you can see yourself settling down, etc). Except for a few specific jobs (big firms, certain corporate counsel positions, etc) nobody cares where you went to law school anymore. All law school does is teach you how to think like a lawyer, it doesn't teach you much at all about the actual practice of law.