Lawschoolnumbers, the ABA 509s, employment stats through the ABA, and generally just google and you can find some stuff.
you could also head to like lawschool.life and reddit to see if you can find anything on what students/alum say about a school you are interested for some insight!
I paid for LST pro, probably not worth $75 bucks but it's useful. I recommend that you check out lawschoolnumbers, LST and ATL rankings to name a few. Also a great tool is mylsn it compiles information from previous cycles and shows you the percentages of students (in a specific range of scores) who were accepted to various schools. heres a link: http://mylsn.info/r/pre-law/admissions/search/
@"David.Busis" said: @Ohnoeshalpme We are building a predictive tool! It's more or less a modern version of MyLSN. I'll announce it to everyone when it's ready!
Also--once you know where your numbers place you (e.g. T6, T14, T1, T2 etc), reach out to alumni of your undergrad!! This has been soooo helpful. My career center recommended it. Every single person I've messaged has gotten back to me. LinkedIn has an alumni tool, which allows you to search for employers, businesses, schools, etc amongst other alumni from your undergrad. I just search the law school I'm interested in and cold message those I can find who have that law school listed. It's also great ammo for a Why X or LOCI
I would pay more attention to old posts on that site. They had some sort of corporate takeover and most of the best users went over to law school life at the start of this year. A lot of them deleted their posts leaving incomplete posts after they started getting censored and edited.
There is definitely irreplaceable good advice in the older TLS forums though.
If you want people to try to talk you out of being a lawyer(which happened frequently on TLS) you could always ask for advice on the forums at JD Underground.
I would pay more attention to old posts on that site. They had some sort of corporate takeover and most of the best users went over to law school life at the start of this year. A lot of them deleted their posts leaving incomplete posts after they started getting censored and edited.
There is definitely irreplaceable good advice in the older TLS forums though.
If you want people to try to talk you out of being a lawyer(which happened frequently on TLS) you could always ask for advice on the forums at JD Underground.
Thanks for the heads up! I actually just checked that site out myself for the first time the other day, so that's good know before I got too deep into it.
I would pay more attention to old posts on that site. They had some sort of corporate takeover and most of the best users went over to law school life at the start of this year. A lot of them deleted their posts leaving incomplete posts after they started getting censored and edited.
There is definitely irreplaceable good advice in the older TLS forums though.
If you want people to try to talk you out of being a lawyer(which happened frequently on TLS) you could always ask for advice on the forums at JD Underground.
Thanks for the heads up! I actually just checked that site out myself for the first time the other day, so that's good know before I got too deep into it.
The users of the site have transitioned to www.lawschool.life. There is much less info, as they've only been there for a few months, but still a good resource non-the-less
Comments
lawschoolnumbers.com
Best website by far. It show rankings, general stats on the school, and profiles of people applying to those schools so you can see where you stand.
Lawschoolnumbers, the ABA 509s, employment stats through the ABA, and generally just google and you can find some stuff.
you could also head to like lawschool.life and reddit to see if you can find anything on what students/alum say about a school you are interested for some insight!
I paid for LST pro, probably not worth $75 bucks but it's useful. I recommend that you check out lawschoolnumbers, LST and ATL rankings to name a few. Also a great tool is mylsn it compiles information from previous cycles and shows you the percentages of students (in a specific range of scores) who were accepted to various schools. heres a link: http://mylsn.info/r/pre-law/admissions/search/
@kelly1234 @TheMikey @Ohnoeshalpme @"Drew Alterio" We compiled medians and a lot more information here: https://7sage.com/admissions/top-law-school-admissions/
This data comes from the most recent 509 disclosures.
We also did a statistical analysis of data from LSN + our own to figure out how much each factor affects your chances of admission: https://7sage.com/admissions/lesson/affects-chances-getting-law-school/.
@Ohnoeshalpme We are building a predictive tool! It's more or less a modern version of MyLSN. I'll announce it to everyone when it's ready!
I don't think I saw anybody mention http://www.top-law-schools.com/
some interesting stuff to look at there
@"David.Busis" The info that 7Sage has compiled for admissions is fantastic!
https://abovethelaw.com/2018/05/the-2018-law-school-rankings-are-here-with-major-employment-driven-changes-at-the-top/
http://www.vault.com/school-rankings/best-law-schools/
Also check out their websites. A lot of law schools websites are designed to sell their school to applicants.
When are y'all planning to announce ?This cycle?
Also--once you know where your numbers place you (e.g. T6, T14, T1, T2 etc), reach out to alumni of your undergrad!! This has been soooo helpful. My career center recommended it. Every single person I've messaged has gotten back to me. LinkedIn has an alumni tool, which allows you to search for employers, businesses, schools, etc amongst other alumni from your undergrad. I just search the law school I'm interested in and cold message those I can find who have that law school listed. It's also great ammo for a Why X or LOCI
ThinkingLSAT often discusses schools and may help with some of the research.
@kimmy_m66 This cycle!
!! Awesome! Very exciting--thanks for always being so innovative here at 7sage
I would pay more attention to old posts on that site. They had some sort of corporate takeover and most of the best users went over to law school life at the start of this year. A lot of them deleted their posts leaving incomplete posts after they started getting censored and edited.
There is definitely irreplaceable good advice in the older TLS forums though.
If you want people to try to talk you out of being a lawyer(which happened frequently on TLS) you could always ask for advice on the forums at JD Underground.
Thanks for the heads up! I actually just checked that site out myself for the first time the other day, so that's good know before I got too deep into it.
The users of the site have transitioned to www.lawschool.life. There is much less info, as they've only been there for a few months, but still a good resource non-the-less