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annaemurphy279421
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Friday, Oct 29 2021

annaemurphy279421

LSAC GPA & UG GPA

Hello everyone,

I am on the verge of freaking out because the GPA LSAC generated is so much lower than what I ended up with when I graduated. I went to community college before transferring and I had to retake several classes because I was still a child who wanted to hang out with my friends more than study if you know what I mean... When I graduated from my university I had a 3.69, but LSAC generated a GPA of 3.19... I can't find any straight answers on whether or not law schools will be placing a lot of weight on the LSAC generated number.

Which GPA do they really care about?

Help! Now I'm so terrified. I had always considered my GPA to be "safe" for where I was applying, but now I don't even know anymore....

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annaemurphy279421
Thursday, Oct 28 2021

Good luck to all of us!!

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annaemurphy279421
Thursday, Sep 23 2021

Hi,

I agree with what people said above, that is depends essentially on who you are and how fast you can retain information, and how disciplined you are with your time. And although technically it is possible to pull it off, in my personal experience and that of my friends who have gone through this process, you would be doing yourself a disservice trying to accomplish this in such a short amount of time. Studying for the LSAT alone is a challenge, and becoming fluent in the ways of the exam takes a lot of practice and in turn a lot of time. I work full-time and I can tell you that you'll need more than a few weekends. The only reason I'm able to work full-time and study for the LSAT is because I have a lot of downtime at my job and I am able to do problem sets pretty consistently throughout the day. Not to mention I had my first exposure to the LSAT about two years ago, so it wasn't completely foreign to me when I started to buckle down. Furthermore, if you are a person of modest financial means, you will need not just a score good enough to get accepted into a school, but a score high enough that will result in some kind of scholarship. The higher the score the more likely you'll get money, and the higher the score the more money you may be awarded. I think someone above also mentioned the personal statement, and perhaps you could produce a high quality piece in a small amount of time. When it comes to the personal statement, unless you already have a good narrative in mind, and can easily produce high quality work, this too will take time. You want it to be flawless, to a degree it is your buffer if your LSAT/GPA are nothing special. Point being, all of these things take time, and they are incredibly stressful to manage for even the most confident applicants. If there isn't an intense need to start law school next fall, you should really consider waiting until next cycle. Wishing you the best in your future endeavors, and good luck!

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Wednesday, Nov 17 2021

annaemurphy279421

Length of GPA/Transcript Addendum

Hello everyone,

I've been putting together my addendum to explain why my CAS GPA is so much lower than my UGPA, and I'm finding it difficult to condense my addendum anymore than I have. Its only three paragraphs, but its almost one full page double-spaced. So many samples I've seen are super short! Is one page double spaced too long for something like this? I believe I've cut to the chase and have not included any unnecessary language or details, yet its still one page.

Is one page acceptable?

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Monday, Sep 13 2021

annaemurphy279421

How to make the best use of my last month

Hello everyone,

I am enrolled in October 2021's LSAT exam and I feel as if I am on the verge of a breakdown most of the time... I first started studying for the LSAT fall 2019 (without 7Sage), and got a 149 on my very first LSAT exam. It was the fall after I graduated college and the stress of finding a job and general income issues were deeply demanding and I decided to delay applying to law school until fall 2021 because I did not have the mental energy to focus on LSAT prep. In February-March 2021 after several months of studying with 7Sage I felt I had made progress when it came to content and accuracy, however timing was a major issue. I took the LSAT in April 2021 and totally FROZE during LG and essentially I guessed on the entire section because the timer filled me with so much anxiety that I could not access the memory centers of my brain to answer the questions. It was horrible and I fought the urge not to burst into tears on camera. So here we are, just shy of a month before the October LSAT and I just CAN'T SEEM TO WORK FAST ENOUGH. I keep getting to game 3 and having little more than 5 minutes left to complete the fourth and most difficult game. LR and RC swing back and forth from having 7-10 wrong answers which is not helping my confidence. I can't score higher than a 155 on my timed PT's, yet can score as high as 165 during blind review. I've recently started trying to begin LG with the hardest games and work backwards, but then the inverse happens and I guess on the easiest games that normally I would have gotten most correct on. I feel like I just keep on studying and nothing really happens to alter my overall performance and I'm extremely anxious about it. I work full-time, so I don't have the ability to do a lot of times exercises during the day, but am willing to suck up my after work exhaustion to try and improve on timing. I find myself wondering, can I even hit 163-165 in less than one month? Am I kidding myself when I think I'll be able to apply to schools before Thanksgiving? So please, if anyone has any advice on how to make the best use of my last month please share! I am trying to keep my cool, talk myself up, not catastrophize, but its not working....

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Monday, Apr 12 2021

annaemurphy279421

Time killed my score

Hello people of 7Sage,

On Saturday I took the LSAT. I had been studying for months, wasn't doing too bad on my practice tests, (although I didn't take as many as perhaps I should have) and I'd been getting good accuracy when I practiced on my own. I was feeling pretty confident that I would not screw it up too bad, and accepted that no matter the score I'd probably take it again in the summer.

Well, I completely froze and had a mental break down during the LG section. The pressure of the timer just broke my spirit and blocked all access to my memories. I managed to get through one game, and then when I got to the second I realized that it was a type I had not practiced for a long time and became hyper aware of how long it was taking me to figure out how to set up the game board. That's when all hell broke loose and I basically gave up and essentially guessed on all of the LG section. I finished the other two sections without cracking under the time pressure, but I barely had time to look at my answers. It would take some miracle for my score not to be complete trash.

I know its not the end of the world, this test is designed to push your limits mentally, but I still can't believe how I froze up like that! Has anybody ever had this happen to them on test day? I felt like I could not breathe or think! As soon as the exam ended I burst into tears. The questions didn't seem particularly difficult, but I just feel like I let myself down. I'm really hoping this won't crush my confidence in the future.

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annaemurphy279421
Thursday, Feb 11 2021

The only reason I'm able to get in good hours studying while working is because there is a lot of downtime at my job so I do not have to rely on after-work hours/weekends to do all my studying.

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annaemurphy279421
Thursday, Jun 10 2021

Good morning,

I am inclined to agree with the commenter above me... Going to law school is not like any other graduate experience in that it demands so much from students, and there is simply no way to bypass what it demands without falling behind very quickly. It sounds like you're a very squared away individual who can handle a lot at one time, however law school (especially 1L) will demand a lot of the emotional labor you might otherwise spend on your family, and dividing it between the two will be really challenging. Obviously many people attend law school and have families, but as the previous commenter stated, you should not go to law school if you're not 100% certain that's what you want to do- especially if you're going to enter a school such as GT which will be peppered with competitive students. If you have doubts now, it doesn't mean you should not apply, at the very least you could delay one year to see if your career goals can be achieved through an MBA or if you're willing to make the sacrifices necessary to get your JD. A little extra time to contemplate options/ get your ducks in a row never hurt anybody. Best of luck.

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annaemurphy279421
Tuesday, Nov 09 2021

I suffer from a similar problem and I am also taking the LSAT on Sunday. At this stage of the game, there is too little time left to make huge leaps and bounds with RC. As someone earlier mentioned, focus a lot of your energy on practicing LG and LR! Tighten up those two sections and the blood RC will take won't cost you as heavily. And just remember, KEEP YOUR COOL! Do not do what I did back in April and have an anxiety induced heart attack when I couldn't remember how to set up a game boards from LG. I laugh now, but man I totally froze to the extreme. Best of luck to you on Sunday, may we all do well! :)

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annaemurphy279421
Wednesday, Jun 09 2021

Hello! First of all, wishing you the best of luck! If you've been using 7Sage to study for the LSAT you're probably a few steps ahead of the game. Just remember that you're more likely to preform better if from here on out you walk, talk, and think with the mentality that you've already mastered this. Being confident will decrease your test anxiety which will keep you calm on test day which will help you avoid making silly mistakes. Just remember that its not the end of the world if you don't get your dream score, you are only human after all! Sending positive vibes ~~~

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Sunday, Nov 07 2021

annaemurphy279421

Actual Score V. Scaled Score

Hi,

I just wanted a little clarification on the scoring of PTs. For example, when I take a practice test and I get a -25 and it results in a 156, why then when I select getting -25 on the score conversion table it says it would result in a scaled score of 162? Is the scaled score the number law schools will see? Which one most closely conforms to my final score? Which one is the score that matters?

I see 156 and I panic, but then I see 162 and I think, eh, that's not too bad. I'm a little confused.... I just want to know hypothetically if I performed with -25 in test day what would my score really translate to.

Why do I feel like when I sit down to take a PT, all my practice dissipates into the air. I take timed sections frequently, and generally I can pull through them with an acceptable number of incorrect answers. But when it comes to a PT, its like all the studying I put in cannot be applied.

Is it anxiety? What is it about a PT that is so different? I'm just trying to figure out what is nerves and what is a studying issue?

Does this happen to anybody else?

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Saturday, Nov 06 2021

annaemurphy279421

Suffering from injury while taking LSAT

Hello everyone,

I recently injured my rotator cuff, and although I'm in the beginning of taking my doctor's recommended medicine, I am concerned that I will not be healed by the time of the November LSAT next weekend. Fortunately, the injury is not in my dominant arm, but it is very uncomfortable moving and even to an extent sitting still.

My question is, God forbid my injury is causing me a lot of discomfort on test day, and it distracts me and in turn negatively impacts my test score, is this something I should write a LSAT addendum on? And if so, should I include a note written by my doctor corroborating my injury and its symptoms?

What do you think?

Thank you

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annaemurphy279421
Monday, Oct 04 2021

Honestly, at this point I'll take any help I can get:

I'm going to score over a 160 on the November LSAT!

:)

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annaemurphy279421
Wednesday, Nov 03 2021

I agree with the person above! The LG section is the easiest to pick up- especially with the explanation videos- and if you can improve on that section it can push your score up easily. But don't neglect the other sections, they do come to bite you in the behind. For LR doing many of them until you catch the patters is a good method. RC essentially tests your short term memory, so doing the memory exercises on the syllabus is a good idea. Best of luck to you!

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annaemurphy279421
Tuesday, Nov 02 2021

Hi,

You should definitely re-take it in January. If you really buckle down and knock out a couple hours of solid studying 5 days a week, and take PT's every week or every other weekend, you could keep steadily scoring in the upper 150s-early 160's area. A someone with a trash CAS GPA, I feel your pain. You really want to increase that LSAT as much as possible and make your essays FLAWLESS. I also want to be an immigration lawyer- more power to us baby! Best of luck!

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annaemurphy279421
Tuesday, Nov 02 2021

Thanks for the advice guys!

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Tuesday, Nov 02 2021

annaemurphy279421

Advice on GPA Addendum

Hello everyone,

Because my CAS GPA (3.12) is so different from my GPA from my university (3.69), I will be needing to attach an addendum. The culprit behind this difference are my grades from community college. Putting it bluntly, I was still very much a child and I had not yet learned how to be a proper student, and although I had retaken the GPA sinking classes with my worst grades in community college, it still looks dreadful on my transcript. My grades from the university I later transferred to are very good and speak for themselves. and I never even got a C!

I'm wondering if anybody else has a similar dynamic going on, and what's the best approach this on the addendum. I don't want it to sound like a list of excuses, but neither of my parents went to college and I didn't even learn what a GPA was until I was placed on Academic Warning, I was forced to move out at 18 and worked, and as I mentioned before, it took me some time before I caught my rhythm.

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