So I took the LSAT for the second time (cancelled my first time) in June and I got a 160, a few points lower than I was expecting. I have a 3.5 GPA and I am an URM (son of Mexican immigrants). I have very good LORs and a pretty strong resume as well as a nontraditional back story. I am aiming to get into a top 20 law school with a scholarship and I am wondering if I am delusional for thinking that I have a shot of that happening with my current stats.
I am considering retaking in September but I don't know if it would be more trouble than it's worth. For example, if I were to retake (this would be my third time) and I got a score that was very similar (or god forbid, lower) than a 160, would that just look bad? I don't want to go through the laborious process of studying for this damn thing just to make myself an even less competitive applicant. Thanks for any input!!
Edit: I am also currently working 45 hours a week and I would be doing that leading up to the Sept LSAT. That could end up being beneficial since I was doing nothing but studying LSAT for the months leading up to the June one and I felt really burned out.
Comments
I think gearing up for a third take would be a good call if you'd like to remain committed to your T20 goal. With your GPA at 25th percentile, you ideally want your LSAT to fall at or above the 75th percentile.
And I wouldn't worry too much about retakes. There's still a lot of value left in them. And completing the 7Sage curriculum doesn't at all mean you can't go back. It covers the whole test and you just need to reinforce your weak spots. 7Sage curriculum is the best way to do that. Plenty of work to do, and the best resources from before remain your best bet.
I follow a person on Instagram who is URM, 3.6/165 LSAT and is a 1L at Harvard (She was someone who posted every step of the journey with #, LSAT score, retakes, acceptances, it was really informative to the process) . She pretty brilliant, doing very well there and landed an amazing summer internship too, but a non URM wouldn't stand a chance with those stats. I dont know if she received aid from Harvard.
Since you mention the desire for a scholarship, I would retake to be safe.
Retakes are definitely valuable. I've learned alot from my retakes by comparing the questions got wrong or right and really honing in on the ones I got wrong twice. If you remember the question, make sure you understand why the answer choice is right and the others are wrong.