I was wondering if law schools keep track of attendance at info sessions and/or use data mining to track demonstrated interest. Long story short, I registered for a virtual info session but had a last-minute emergency and couldn't attend - could this affect my chances when I apply? Not sure if I should send an email to admissions explaining my absence.
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I'm applying to law school next fall (for Fall 2023), but have already reached out to my former professors to ask for letters of rec since I've been out of school for a year and don't want them to forget me. If they submit their LORs to LSAC sometime in the next couple of months, would it look worse to admissions officers than if they waited until a little closer to next application cycle? I just wasn't sure if having LORs submitted too early could potentially weaken my application.
Any thoughts/advice would be appreciated. Thanks!
I originally chose answer choice A but eliminated it - it says the amount of art supplies used is directly proportional to the number of students in any given class, and there are 25 classes. And then it says that enrollment overall increased by 20%. Maybe some classes had a disproportionate increase in enrollment compared to others - wouldn't this mean that we can't assume that any given class increased in # of students?
#help
I just went back to the email they sent the week before the June LSAT and it says we need to show the camera our scratch paper before starting the essay? I'm seeing conflicting answers everywhere about whether or not scratch paper was allowed and am very confused