Hey everyone,
So I am beginning my 5th year at the University of Guelph, in the Honours Program for Sociology. I would say as of the beginning of 3rd year, I decided that I really did want to go to Law School, and from there my grades increased substantially as I got really serious and I also figured out what studying techniques, etc., worked best for me. With this, I have been reading through the different discussion forums and had noticed that people had been mentioning whether they were on the lower end for their GPA, while other were mentioning they had a decent GPA. So my question for everyone, especially those who may have already have experience with the Law School application/LSAT process, what would you/they consider to be a lower GPA and a decent GPA?
Also! I've also been noticing that people mentioned L2 & B2 (what does this mean?)
When I decided that I wanted to go to Law School I did not do a ton of researching for all of these details because I wanted my concentration to be solely on continuing a trend of increasing my grades. So this is why I have such questions!
Thanks so much!
& Good luck to everyone!
Comments
Welcome. Where a GPA constitutes as "low" is relative. Research the schools you'd like to go to and take a look at their stats.
Keep up the good work.
I dunno what b2 could be. L2 is lingo for 2d year law school student.
EDIT: Just google searched your uni and it turns out you are in Canada lol! so apparently those applying to Canadian schools are allowed to have the recommendation letters on file for only 1 year before they get shredded into pieces and thus deleted from your profile. Not sure why they do this, but if you don't apply through LSAC and want to attend law school in Canada, make sure the letters you have on file don't go to waste once you apply meaning you should only have those letters if you plan on applying that year.
I've always considered anything below a 3.2 "somewhat low" and a 3.4 "average." Those numbers are simply my opinion of what is low and what is average in terms of GPA.