Admission deans from Stanford, Duke, and Cornell like to mention an applicant who, despite having an otherwise perfect application, decided to draw a picture on his or her writing response sheet; rejected without further consideration. I have no reason to think that other schools don't read writing samples.
Absolutely correct here. I went to the LSAC Law School Convention/Tour and attended an admissions panel where they all mentioned not to horse around on the writing sample. They talked about some dumb things people wrote on it and how that was the reason they were rejected from the school (believe one of them was Vandy).
It is what its called....a writing sample. Gives them an idea of what your writing looks like and that is it. They absolutely read it! So don't do stupid!
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
Agreed. Despite knowing the hand-turkey girl, I'd never try that myself.
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
Admission deans from Stanford, Duke, and Cornell like to mention an applicant who, despite having an otherwise perfect application, decided to draw a picture on his or her writing response sheet; rejected without further consideration. I have no reason to think that other schools don't read writing samples.
It's a great way to see how you REALLY write. Of course they know it's rushed and not everyone's best but it could raise some eyebrows if you have some Pulitzer prize winning writing in your personal statement but you couldn't communicate basic ideas in your LSAT writing sample.
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19 comments
@ninaleaoishi762 so disappointed she didn't do foot turkey.
@mickeycaleb788 said:
Admission deans from Stanford, Duke, and Cornell like to mention an applicant who, despite having an otherwise perfect application, decided to draw a picture on his or her writing response sheet; rejected without further consideration. I have no reason to think that other schools don't read writing samples.
Absolutely correct here. I went to the LSAC Law School Convention/Tour and attended an admissions panel where they all mentioned not to horse around on the writing sample. They talked about some dumb things people wrote on it and how that was the reason they were rejected from the school (believe one of them was Vandy).
It is what its called....a writing sample. Gives them an idea of what your writing looks like and that is it. They absolutely read it! So don't do stupid!
You know the hand-turkey girl?!
@aaronkeegan92975 said:
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
Agreed. Despite knowing the hand-turkey girl, I'd never try that myself.
@aaronkeegan92975 said:
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
Ding dong dang! Couldn't agree more.
I have no idea whether they do or not, I just look at the exercise as a risk mitigation event. Why would I spend months / years studying for the LSAT and working on different inputs (resume/PS/additional essays) to my application that will be the basis for an individual / group of people who don't know me to decide whether or not to accept me only to draw a picture or not at least attempt to do well at another input that could be looked at? There is absolutely no upside to not at least trying to put forth a good effort. You aren't "getting over" on anyone by drawing a picture of a turkey... you aren't sticking it to the man, you are just potentially lessening your own chances at success.
I doubt they read much into it, but they probably eyeball it a bit.
Not sure, but I'd plan on them looking at it. Another possibility is the bar may want to see it.
I doubt they pay close attention, but I bet they at least scan it if not fully read it.
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Admission deans from Stanford, Duke, and Cornell like to mention an applicant who, despite having an otherwise perfect application, decided to draw a picture on his or her writing response sheet; rejected without further consideration. I have no reason to think that other schools don't read writing samples.
@ninaleaoishi762 said:
Yes, I think they do.
At the same time, I knew a girl who got into Harvard, and she drew a hand turkey on her writing sample.
https://thenib.com/beyond-the-hand-turkey-5c6fc85b5199
LOL
Yes, I think they do.
At the same time, I knew a girl who got into Harvard, and she drew a hand turkey on her writing sample.
https://thenib.com/beyond-the-hand-turkey-5c6fc85b5199
Yes they definitely do. I believe they read it to see if you took the sample seriously and not wrote some troll response.
I’m gonna be the odd ball, nope!
Maybe it depends on the school???
Or, maybe if someone is waitlisted or trying to negotiate scholarships or something.
Yes.
It's a great way to see how you REALLY write. Of course they know it's rushed and not everyone's best but it could raise some eyebrows if you have some Pulitzer prize winning writing in your personal statement but you couldn't communicate basic ideas in your LSAT writing sample.
Yes, but they don't give it a lot of weight.
I've heard this before - it might have been from my adviser, not sure.
"Law schools think of your writing sample as an example of the worse possible writing you preform."
Lol, idk how true that is, but it stuck with me so I put some effort into that part of the test!
Yep.