I finished community college with by GPA a little over a 3.8. I now have a bit over a 3.9 after a year in the university I transferred to. LSAC processed my GPA as a 3.72.
71.4 hours earned as As. 14.7 hours Bs. 3 hours C. 3 hours D.
I repeated that class I got a D in and got an A in it...signed all those forms so that the D wouldn't count against my GPA...LSAC still counts that?
I also had 4 A+s in university, I thought that LSAC bumps your GPA up with A+s?
I was thinking I would for sure have at least a 3.8 and I'd be in the 25th percentile of my top schools GPA wise and definitely be able to get merit scholarships if I did well on the LSAT. I'm actually not even in the 50th percentile (3.74 at UCLA).
I really regret going to community college, I was told even by school counselors that law schools don't even look at your community college GPA, I had no idea that D would effect my life.
*Should I rethink the schools that I apply to? Should I not even apply this year and stay a 5th year to finish my double major and get my GPA up?*
Comments
2. You were misled. Law schools DEFINITELY look at your community college GPA - even those classes you took in HS.
School counselors are awful. I recently couldn't even get a counselor to confirm the basic math that I can take 3 classes per quarter my senior year and have enough units to graduate. I had to meet with 2 diff counselors, email another, and ended up just having the front desk person confirm that I didn't miss anything.
Errors aren't unheard of - use the calculator to verify, but it does sound roughly accurate. https://7sage.com/gpa-calculator/
"Quarter credit hours only count as 2/3 of semester credit hours" probably explains why my GPA was messed up. Pretty ridiculous that my General ED at CC counts more towards my GPA than higher division classes at a UC
Go to MyLSN.info and type in 3.72 with your target LSAT score and you'll see that you still have a shot at Harvard on down to UCLA. That is hard to say... I think ultimately it will be a hard choice you have to make. What will your double major be in? What law schools are you targeting? If HYS, CNN, it might be worth it if you can get your GPA up to a 3.8+ But like anything else time you'll spend going through a 5th year (and money if you're paying) also needs to be considered, so you have to consider those things as well. How much will you will able to boost your GPA with another year of all As?
That gap year might better be spent studying to kill the LSAT and gaining work experience.
Just somethings to consider... At the end of the day, a 3.7 is still a really kickass GPA and you should be proud. Law schools will also consider your upward grade trend too...
Lo and behold, this year LSAC decided to start converting those J-term grades and counting it against your GPA for the first time - grading a Pass (the standard grade that everyone receives) as a B, or a 3.0. Suddenly, every Williams applicant had 4 extra B grades on their transcripts, bringing down their GPA's a fair amount in the majority of cases, myself included. Our registrar tried to explain to LSAC that Williams doesn't really use the HP/P/PP scale for J-term, and to count them as A/B/C grades would be an unfair and inaccurate reflection of students' coursework, but to no avail. Now I feel even more pressure to hit the LSAT out of the park this Saturday, which is probably the exact wrong attitude to have going into the test.
TL;DR: LSAC sucks. And their method of calculating GPAs also sucks.
I think that most admissions officers are familiar with Williams though and would probably not look down on you because of it. Williams is a great school and any law school will recognize that.
also, was it a pre law advisor at your school? yeah, they tend to not really know what they're talking about.
i don't think we have a school that requires a 4.0
http://www.macleans.ca/wp-content/uploads/2013/09/Canadian-Law-schools.jpg
This is so interesting. I just realized that I don't know much about the Canadian law school system at all... I need to learn about it!
This is the way it should be here too... Too bad it is basically the exact opposite.
Question on this, if you have a masters do they take the GPA of just your undergrad or do they take your masters into account as well?
No, grad school grades do not count toward your GPA. Only undergraduate up until your first bachelor’s is achieved. I think you still have to turn in transcripts, but it wouldn’t be included in your GPA calculation.
The LSAT grade system is certainly a little messed up.
But any classes at undergraduate institutions before your first bachelor's degree is awarded count including classes taken at a community college and those taken during high school, A+'s count as a 4.33(https://www.lsac.org/jd/help/faqs-cas), and failed classes count.
I once had a GPA of around 3.7 in CC and 3.4 in university. I had a few failing grades in CC because I was pursuing a different major at the time. Now this is going to haunt me. What a great day to wake up to.
Nope. LSAT undoubtedly counts for more than GPA. The reason is that there are a ton of applicants with high GPAs whereas high LSATs are far more rare. Furthermore, there are so many different undergrad majors that law schools treat the LSAT as a stronger indictor of how you're likely to perform.
Still, GPA is super important! All else equal though LSAT seems to be weighted much more.