I know the smart decision would be to limit myself to some number of schools I will apply, but the thing is I cannot. I feel like applying to each and single one in the top 25 law schools. I also think about not having any safety schools on the list and applying only to those I will absolutely love to go to, not simply be "okay" with. Does it sound like a mad woman plan?
Comments
EDIT: Nope, not a good plan...refer to the comments below lol
Also, I just realized you said you do NOT plan on applying to "safety" schools and I do not think this is a good approach even if your GPA/LSAT was in every school's 25th/median/75th/above 75th percentile. You just never know and don't take any risks when applying. I will say however, if you have a 3.9 GPA with a 173 LSAT, I would maybe add 1 or 2 safety schools compared to a splitter applicant where I recommend they apply to many safety schools. Hope that makes sense.
That said, you are more than welcome to apply to all of the T25...if you can afford to do so. If not, narrow it down to your top 15 or so, and apply to those.
as you said so what is the actual range one should be looking at?
I don't really agree with applying to law schools you wouldn't want to go to even if you got in, unless it be for scholarship negotiations. If only because it seems like a waste of time and money. For instance, if you have absolutely no intention of going to Iowa Law School than I don't see any reason to apply, lol. You mention that yo are also thinking about only applying to places you would absolutely love to go; I think that is a great approach! Aim and apply to go to a school you will be happy attending. As long as you do that, you can't lose
Good Luck!
That said, a safety school is simply that, a safety school. You don't apply to it, hoping that it'll be the only school that will accept you. You apply to it knowing that life happens, and should life present you with a set of unforeseen circumstances that preclude the possibility of going to a top 10 school, you'll still have your safety schools to fall back on. The aforementioned is highly unlikely, but I have heard of it happening plenty of times.
Tl;dr: Just apply to a few safety schools, just "in case."
Good luck to you.