Hello! My name is Jaida, and I am planning to take my LSAT this August. I live in a pretty small town and would love to form an online "study group". I want this group to encompass struggles, accomplishments, complaints, and community, as I do not currently have that based on where I live. I'd love to transition it over to social media and really expand from just a study group to an LSAT community, after all, we will all be peers in the legal field at some point! Feel free to join here or add me on Instagram and send me a message. @jaidaandersonnn
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I did not think wise and good would be used interchangeably. They have different subtext, but I got it right in the BR.
@JacobBaska I did end up reaching out to a professor from my senior-level online courses. She agreed to write me a letter of recommendation! Thank you !
I always write these backwards. What am I missing?
Benefits another person AND performed with that intention > action is morally good
/(action is morally good) > /benefits another person AND /performed with that intention
Also can someone explain what I did wrong in Q5.?
Anyone who is twenty-one years old or older is legally allowed to purchase alcohol in the United States.
21+ > legally allowed to purchase alcohol + United States
I have been graduated from college for a year now, headed into my second. I can not say that I have maintained any strong relationships with professors due to the fact that I almost always was at work. I would come to class and head straight to work. However, I did work for the Office of Admissions at my university and fostered really great connections with my supervisors.
My question is, would it be better to get a letter of recommendation from someone at my on-campus job, my job/internship at the law firm I currently work at, a past employer, my current mentor, or still try and obtain a professor's letter of recommendation.
I have really close personal/professional relationships with the above (minus the professor) and would love thoughts! Thanks!
@16dnholli I think the office hours videos are kind of designed for that, but i could be wrong!
With an LSAT Score and GPA like that and stable work experience at a "high -value" company , I see no reason why you should wait. Many of my friends , that have been accepted to law school , have almost no law experience and have been accepted. (Disclaimer: this is just based on my experience!)
I am planning to apply for law school this upcoming cycle. I am one year post -grad. What is the best approach or template for writing an addendum for a class you took during undergraduate? Additionally, do you guys find that admissions counselors are worth the money or are there other alternatives you prefer? - Sincerely a First Gen Prospective Law Student
Hello to all Texas LSAT takers! I graduated from TTU in May 2025 and have been a Paralegal for almost two years now. Would love to connect with y'all! #WreckEm and Good Luck!
Hey everyone! This might be a silly question but I was wondering if law schools view your first institution GPA and secondary institution as two separate GPA's or just your cumulative GPA? I graduated from community college with my Associates and then transferred to university for my Bachelors. TIA!

I have thought that BR only reviews the incorrect answers and have been so confused this entire process.