It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
I was a community college to state school grad that pieced together a bachelors degree from random credits and studied for the LSAT while working and supporting a family. I started with a 154 and took the LSAT seven times. My application was a C&F nightmare and reading the first personal statement I applied with makes me cringe so hard I get a headache.
This community, including @"J.Y. Ping", @"David Busis", @"Cant Get Right", @Mike_Ross and way too many other people to mention, helped me unfuck my approach to this test and admissions. @"Nora Miller" basically got me into law school and set me on a path to become the somewhat serviceable writer I am today. Three years later, I've won multiple national bar association essay competitions, published with HLS, and worked as a law review editor. I've taught written advocacy for our LLM program and at our local prisons, and worked death penalty cases that I'll (hopefully) be taking with me as part of my pro bono practice. I've CALI'ed four classes and "passed" the UBE with an approximate 98th percentile score. Doing a second non-UBE bar exam before heading off to a big law litigation job.
Hopefully that doesn't sound too pretentious. The points I'm trying to make are (1) that if I can do it, anyone can do it... including you, and (2) I wouldn't have achieved any of that without 7sage and the great people here—the people I learned from, the people who allowed me to tutor them (a great way to improve your own understanding of the test), and the people who were willing to candidly tell me all the ways my application sucked or how dumb my essay about surfing in Boston was.
Do hit me with any questions, but like most people who pass through 7sage, my time here is probably done after this. Besides, I think I have to retire the username now that I haz JD. Make use of this great community, help each other out, and don't give up.
It's been real. Thanks 7sage.
Comments
you're an inspiration, congratulations!!!
This is awesome. I've seen you around here a lot but I didn't know your story. Very inspiring. I'm almost 28 and I feel like I'm getting too old to still be studying for the lsat but I've made so much progress since I started studying a couple years ago, and giving up is not an option. I also went to a state school haha
deleted
goals
Hey I am very interested in joining and just want an idea on how to even approach this course. Currently I am thinking about going through all the curriculum(I have 8 hours a day to spend on this), taking a diagnostic test, seeing where I am at, going to sign up for either a class or coach version, take drills and get a custom study plan. Is this a good plan, what plan do you suggest? I also want to know how do i know when to take my prep tests, do you guys offer any type of timing or anything so i can know whether or not I am taking an exam to early or too late. Also what is the difference between the coach plan and a private tutor. I mainly just want to have a structured plan (without me having to guess when I have to take a exam etc) while also getting real feedback?
You're amazing. Thank you for sharing this!
Congratulations! Thank you for sharing your story with us.
Best of luck on your big law journey!
Congrats! You're a great story. I wish you nothing but sucess in your next chapter.
I'm so happy for you!
I'll defer to someone more familiar with the current version of the site. But generally, a class is going to give you the same review of foundational concepts you'd get in the core curriculum, so doing one right after seems redundant. Once you collect all the conceptual tools required to take the test, I think it becomes more of a performance task... like a sport or playing an instrument, where the question changes from "do you know" to "can you do." That is where individualized instruction can be useful.
IMO, PTs are for when you've done adequate work to expect a performance increase. They're to provide data on the efficacy of your methods much more than they are a means of improving in and of themselves. You'll get different opinions on this but I don't think unpurposed content consumption is the best way to improve.
I'm sure someone else more qualified will be along shortly to give you a better answer.
Woah, CONGRATS!!!!! Time really flies—I feel like we were JUST brainstorming essay topics last week. Thanks for letting us be part of this chapter, it's been a pleasure. Wishing you the very best of luck with everything that comes next!
Thanks man. Bro... Jackson still talks about you to this day.
It does. Thanks Nora... I definitely couldn't have done it without you!
Wow Congrats! You rock! This is so amazing and inspiring. I appreciate your story and story such as these that are not so straight path, perfect. Helps to know that everyone's path and journey to law is different, unique, and worthy. All of the effort, sweat and motivation paid off. This really inspires me! Best wishes!
This is amazing and inspiring! And thank you for sharing and trying to lift us up with you! I have some similar background and was starting to feel a bit discouraged going into the June exam. Thanks for the pick-me-up and best to you and the good work you have and will continue to do!