hey y'all! I hope everyone had a merry christmas! I really need advice!!!!!!!!!! So, as I am working through my law school applications for the fall 2024 cycle, I am now thinking of possibly writing an addendum for my low lsat scores. I took the lsat in June scored a 147, and then in October a 148. I registered for this upcoming January as well. I have an amazing resume full of extracurriculars as well as a 4.0 GPA. During the time between June and October, my grandmother fought the end of her battle with cancer and passed away right before I took the LSAT in October. I truly do believe this is the sole reason for me not drastically improving, seeing that I was scoring 158's on my practice tests consistently. However, I am wondering if I should write an addendum for this and apply now and explain this and not take the January LSAT. Or should I take the January LSAT and not write this? What do y'all think? A lot of my applications are due at the beginning of February.
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6 comments
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Write an addendum after retaking the LSAT--doesn't have to be January. In fact, like others here I'd encourage you to take a gap year and apply next cycle. With your GPA, if you get a high enough LSAT score you're looking at full-ride scholarships. If you're K-JD applicant now, then a gap year + some work experience will also position you better for acceptances + scholarship money. Admissions are rolling. January is already late if the deadlines for the schools you're looking at are early Feb. Apply October next year and watch the money roll in!
Please study and retake. Even push to another cycle. You’re talking about over $100,000 in debt which might not seem like a lot but you will be stuck paying X amount each month after graduation. Loans are depressing especially compounding interest. Your future self will thank you. Best of luck to you.
Law school isn't going anywhere, so unless you have a personal reason why you absolutely need to attend law school as soon as possible, I'd suggest you take your time, retake, and get a solid score.
If you post a higher score in Jan it might be worth explaining the disparity (some schools explicitly ask you to), but a school will generally view you as your highest score regardless, idiosyncrasies aside. That said, I'd think really hard about pushing to the next cycle. A February app is not ideal (I was a February applicant) and a 4.0 will get you into literally any school you want if you can bring your score up.
Sub-160 scores usually indicate foundational deficiencies, meaning you don't yet have all the tools to take the test. Also meaning that many of those missing points can be picked up fairly quickly. A 10 point test day penalty is big but not unreasonable in that scoring range where we expect more volatility.
Unless school choice and scholarships are of no consequence, I'd recommend trying for a higher LSAT and putting that GPA to better use. Feel free to message if you want some troubleshooting.
I'm in the exact same position as you. I'm not pleased with my LSAT score & was scoring so much better in practice than what I tested. It's very frustrating!! I wrote an addendum for apps and definitely recommend doing that. I submitted applications already with the addendum and stated that I will be retaking the LSAT in Jan, and a lot of the schools are holding out on my application until they get that new LSAT score. Best of luck to you! Remember not to stress too hard, things always work out in the end!