Hi all, to make this brief...I am considering canceling my score for a few reasons.
1. The schools I want to go to, and the scholarship money are the primary concern for choosing to go to law school. It's a must that I maximize both.
2. I was sick with mono, then the flu, and then a string of migraines. So I lost 2-3 weeks of studying right before the exam.
3. The night of the exam, I couldn't sleep and got a total of 5 hours of quality sleep. My brain felt foggy and not fresh at all.
4. Even if I cancel and write Feb, I will still make the deadline for 3 of the schools I would want to attend. If I do better than expected, I could always apply in the next wave with better prospects for both schools and scholarships.
and finally.. I was PTing around 170s, but after Preptest in the 70s my score dropped down to 163.
What do you guys think?
(Also posted this on reddit)
Comments
Do not cancel unless:
1) You had a major bubbling error of which you were made aware during the test and from which you were unable to recover
-or-
2) You had a major health crisis (seizure, vomiting, bathroom emergency) during the test and were affected for more than 5 minutes
From what you're saying, you do not meet either of these criteria. I advise you NOT to cancel. You will be much better off knowing your score than not.
@Pacifico 's reasoning is the same as my own, @Ghoorch
In the case where I did below my average..the schools that I am applying to 1/2 of them will look at the higher score, the ones that don't I can explain the migraine and illness as they're both documented. That coupled with a higher score would make sense to law schools who see my first take.
I do phenomenally on my second take, then I can wait a gap year and apply early.
Then there's the case that I did average, in that case I can prep harder and try to boost to a higher score (+3 pts higher), still explain the illness.
For a cancelled score, it all falls on Feb.
@mimimimi I had a migraine that began around 6-7pm the night before. For me they're usually triggered by sleep schedule changes. The migraine kept me up and continued on into the exam. Apart from being distracting as hell, migraines have the added benefit of impairing cognitive functioning. This is the main reason for canceling, I wasn't nervous as I've been prepping for a long time.