17 comments

  • Tuesday, Jul 29 2014

    I thought about making one for Canadian schools, but couldn't find a good source for 25th/median/75th GPA and LSAT scores for Canadian law schools.

    If you know of one, please pass it on!

    2
  • Monday, Jul 28 2014

    Can you guys do one for Canada too? Where's the love? :)

    2
  • Friday, Jun 20 2014

    Thanks for your help!

    0
  • Friday, Jun 20 2014

    @jschmi25507 This is all i could find relating to canadian schools. It does look a little out of date but still fairly accurate. I doubt there is any predictor sites for Canadian schools.

    http://www.oxfordseminars.ca/LSAT/lsat_profiles.php

    0
  • Friday, Jun 20 2014

    Does anyone have a link to this kind of information for schools in Canada? We may be up North but our admissions is essentially the same process. Thanks!

    2
  • Thursday, Jun 19 2014

    Most of the informations here are very helpful. Thanks!

    1
  • Friday, May 23 2014

    Things such as URM status (under-represented minority), your personal statement, when you apply during the app cycle and letters of recommendation are all material considerations that make predicting your chances within a certain range pretty difficult.

    There are a few "what are my chances"-predictors out there floating around but it's still all based on the same historic numbers sourced from the same data as the above sites... Try those out but it goes without saying, don't rely exclusively on these numbers. They are based on prior admissions and circumstances change from cycle to cycle. For instance the economic issue of the surplus of recent graduate lawyers to jobs available and the social issue of schools touting a more "diverse" environment these days (whatever that means) skew acceptance distributions in different ways.

    http://lawschoolnumbers.com/lsat-prep/lsat-score-predictors

    Hope that helps!

    0
  • Friday, May 23 2014

    That was essentially my question just two comments up, it's really confusing, and there aren't any real credible or reliable sources of information on this matter. Can anyone provide any informed clarification?

    0
  • Thursday, May 22 2014

    How strictly should we adhere to this graph? I have no clue where I would fall on this graph if I did outstandingly well on the LSAT. Is GPA a good indicator on who gets selected? Who would Harvard accept, a computer science major with a 3.2 and a 176 or a psychology major with a 3.9 and a 171? Assuming rolling admission and we are down to the last spot.

    0
  • Thursday, May 22 2014

    I like that suggestion ^

    0
  • Thursday, May 22 2014

    I really like the aesthetics of everything 7sage puts out. Super classy and easy to use.

    I wonder if you could add on an admissions probability calculator to this set up. It would require some weighting of LSAT and GPA, but if you can figure that out, it would look really cool on the graph.

    3
  • Thursday, May 22 2014

    Is there any type of discrepency between undergraduate majors and undergraduate university rankings. I studied mechanical engineering in a top 50 school and its a lot harder to get a 3.9 GPA than it would be for a lot of other majors (I absolutely mean no disrespect). My GPA was 3.66, and I want to know if that would hinder any chances I have of getting into the top 20, granted I achieve the required LSAT score.

    1
  • Tuesday, May 20 2014

    I can't find on the website explicitly where LST gets these numbers for LSAT & GPA, but in just reading briefly over their employment numbers and other research for that information, if they were done similarly, I would lean for LST. LSN states that their numbers are user supplied. I didn't look into it more than that, but I am sure somewhere deeper in their information sections they should notate where and with what methods they came to those numbers.

    3
  • Monday, May 19 2014

    Any thoughts on which to rely more on?

    0
  • Monday, May 19 2014

    The data is from Law School Transparency (lstscorereports.com/national/admissions/). Strange that the data on LSN is different...

    0
  • Sunday, May 18 2014

    Where do these data come from? I've seen the ranges higher in other places like here http://lawschoolnumbers.com/.

    1
  • Sunday, May 18 2014

    This is an awesome, awesome chart...

    1

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