Okay, here is my conundrum: I will be taking the LSAT for the 3rd and final time in September. However, I don't feel absolutely confident that I will be able to raise my score to my desired level from now until September. I am considering postponing until December, but am curious how much that late application might affect my chances of being admitted to the law school of my choice, assuming I meet my target LSAT score. This is a great community, and was curious as to what you 7sagers would advise; postpone till December in hopes of a higher LSAT at the risk of a late application, or go ahead and push through these courses quickly, hope for the best on my 3rd LSAT, and apply to school early (middle October)???
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Not to mention, many schools (including t14) wait until after Thanksgiving to honestly review applications. The most you can do is submit your application before the score is released and let the schools now you're submitting a new LSAT score so they can place your app on hold.
I also had the same concern about applying with the December LSAT. So I emailed Dean Meeker, who is former Dean of Admissions for a top law school, and now a law school admissions consultant.
Here was his answer:
"My advice is to wait and take in December if you're not feeling ready for the September test. BUT -- work on getting your applications completed before then. I'd still submit the applications by Thanksgiving if you can (or at the latest just after the LSAT in those first few weeks of December). I know that it means you'd be submitting applications without knowing your score, but it at that point you're feeling more confident about your score, better to get the apps in before January. The schools will begin processing your application when they receive it, and it will remain incomplete until they receive your score. But at least once they receive the score your application is ready to be forwarded to committee for review. If you wait until January to apply, you're delaying the processing of the application by at least a few weeks. Plus it is right after the holiday break - many admissions offices are closed for the week from Christmas to New Year's - so there is always a deluge of applications and mail when they return, so the processing time is even longer than it is in the fall.
Bottom line: better to apply with your best application in December than with a weaker application in October. The benefit of the higher LSAT score and overall stronger application will outweigh the benefit of an earlier application with a lower LSAT score."
You do seem like you have a LOT going on. So it may be very difficult to study for the LSAT during this time. Is there anyway you can wait and take the LSAT in June or September of next year an apply next cycle? If you can, I would say this is probably the best course of action.
However, if this is not a possibility, then absolutely at least try to postpone until December. And extra 3 months will only help you get closer to your goal. During this time definitely reach out to the schools you are applying to and let them know you are taking in December and to put your app on hold. I think some schools will even accept February scores...but not all, so look into that. Could be helpful to have a couple extra months from December to Feb to study.
If you can though, see what you can do about postponing until you can study to reach your potential. This is something that is very hard to do when you are working long hours and weekends. I would say it is totally doable with a full-time job, even one as demanding as yours as a paralegal, but weekends are important LSAT prep times for people with FT jobs. So again, if you can, try to postpone. This way you can have sufficient time to study and get your apps in. The best part is next cycle you can apply earlier with a stronger app. Literally a win-win.
I'm almost positive that every law school understands that they're going to get a handful of incredible applicants come the December administration. So, they take that into account when deciding who to send out offers to.