I have an aunt/uncle who graduated from a specific Law School I'm applying for. They were very accomplished at this school and have gone on to become very successful in there career. My question is it proper for this person to right me a letter of recommendation for this school, or possibly another one? If this person is happy to help is there any part they can play in helping my admissions process?

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5 comments

  • Thursday, Jul 05 2018

    Don't include if they were merely successful alumni. If they were a dean at that specific school then maybe, but that's still pushing it.

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  • Thursday, Jul 05 2018

    Absolutely. Family members always have the best things to say.

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  • Thursday, Jul 05 2018

    I would just slide the information into why you want to attend that law school. The good news is that any type of nepotism is a factor within the law school, not the general university. Like Penn's website specifically says that if you have a parent who went to Penn Law it will be considered, but not any other Penn school. I also don't know if an aunt or uncle will matter, or if it's just your parents who can make a difference. Either way, just stick it in your essay somewhere.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 04 2018

    Agreeing with @jsohn0305774. There may be a spot in the application where you can mention you know an alum and how you know them, though. If not, you can mention at a visit.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 04 2018

    no. thankfully, nepotism doesnt work for LORs. LORs should be from professors who can speak on your academic success. admissions wants to know how you'll do in school, not who you know.

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