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7Sagers,
On Tuesday, December 13th, at 9 p.m. EST, I’ll answer all your last-minute application questions. Still trying to figure out your diversity statement? Can’t decide whether you should send a “Why X” essay? Wondering whether to contact the admissions department about the slip-up? In the mood to feel schadenfreude about other people’s catastrophes? Come on over.
Post your questions below in as much detail as possible. I’ll answer written questions first, then move on to your live questions.
Please join my meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone.
https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/137153229
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (571) 317-3122
Access Code: 137-153-229
First GoToMeeting? Try a test session: http://help.citrix.com/getready
Comments
Also, if LSAC is already including a letter in my file explaining the circumstances of a low LSAT score, do I need to include an addendum that explains it also?
How do I draw the line between giving context to an award and clutter my resumé? Am I explaining too much (i.e. bragging) if I am explaining that I am the only student in the history of my university to mark a certain achievement? Is it overkill by the 1st one or by the 3rd one?
2. In terms of waitlist etiquette, is it proper to send an email to the dean of admissions and all the admissions staff? Would calling or sending a letter be more appropriate?
3. If you have work experience since high school working in a law-related position, say with the Office of the Public Defender, can you include it? If you have a lot of work experience, can your resume be more than one page in length?
2. How specific can I get in my personal statement regarding my prospective field of law? I am a relatively more experienced applicant, having been out of school for a few years, and through my other work/grad school experiences I've been able to narrow down my interest to a specific field of law. The issue is this: while I know it is a good thing in general to show some kind of contextual interest in law and/or vision of what your future professional practice might look like, I worry that from the perspective of admissions professionals---who might often see lots of applicants express their interest in more noble causes like human rights or children's advocacy, only to later on graduate and practice in big, white shoe firms and go on to specialize in more transactional, lucrative areas of the law---this might come off as naive. Is it okay to express strong commitment to one, very specific field of law, or is it better to soften that language in the personal statement?
Thanks for answering questions!
In that case, what can I write for diversity statement?
Can there be any overlap or any overlap should be avoided? (such as touching a little in personal statement and talk in detail in diversity statement)
Would challenge&overcome story work for diversity statement?
I would like to hear some subjects and themes that I can use to write diversity statement.
2. Would it be helpful to talk to admission people or can it actually hurt?
I do not want to give negative images and thought if so I would rather not visiting them...
In which case it can hurt application and in which case it can be helpful?
What questions would you ask them and what questions would you avoid?
3. Are law school booklets helpful in knowing the schools or they do not have much info? When I checked their websites there are so much info and I kind of got lost...especially where to pay attention to (such as for writing why X school essay)
Thanks!
My target schools are NYU and Columbia, and I'm near their medians (170/3.79). I took the December LSAT to improve my chances of admission and maybe get scholarship money. Looking back on the test, I'm not feeling so good--my guess is that I did the same or maybe even worse. So my question is, should I submit my application now (it's ready to go), or should I wait for my December score? I know there's an advantage to applying early, so I'm leaning towards doing that. I doubt I will be rejected before Dec. scores come out, so could I add the new score to my application once it comes in and keep my place in line? What should be my strategy?
Thanks for your time!
1. If the "Why School X" only allows 250 characters....should location (wanting to work in and better the community/location that is home to me) or a specific program I'm interested in that they offer (Institute for Professional Leadership) take precedence?
2. As far as extra curricular activities go, what is considered "significant"? It's under a section labeled "Achievements"
3. Time after college...it says to please describe in detail (in 500 characters or less). How much detail exactly are they looking for? Should I account for the 2-3 months I spent job searching immediately after graduation?
4. Resume...I am in AmeriCorps, and my volunteer experience is easily 4 pages long. Most of the events lasted 2-4 hours, and all of them are community based. Is this a legitimate reason to make my resume longer? Or, do you have a suggestion on how to make 100+ hours of volunteer experience concise? Like, is there a question I can ask myself about each volunteer experience on whether or not to include it?
THANKS!!
In my addendum I wanted to talk about motivation. My freshman year I was motivated to try and become a professor, but even though I got decent grades I didn't find anything interesting so I started goofing off the following years. I discovered law after graduating in May 2014 and working in a law office immediately after. Work life made me motivated to attend law school.
Is something like this worth writing in my application? I feel like I have to acknowledge the downward trend in my grades just because my grades fluctuated so much
I am unsure of whether to submit an addenda related to my grades. During my first three years I was studying full-time but I split my fourth year into two years because I got a corporate sales position.
Here is a summary of my transcript:
Full-time courseload
Y1: 3.1 gpa (including a 50 (D) on a full-year course, which I re-took and got a 68)
Y2: 3.4 gpa
Y3: 3.65 gpa
Part-time courseload (working 20-25 hours a week while taking half a courseload and playing varsity soccer)
Y4: 3.3 gpa
Y5: 2.9 ( including a 50 (D), a 61 (C), and a 68 (C+) which are bringing down my average significantly.)
Summer: 4.0 in two courses (88 and 90, respectively.
Overall CGPA : 3.1
I took commerce in university (Ivy League) and didn't do too well in my quantitative courses compared to my research and writing courses.
My lowest marks (50,68,50, 61) are all in economics, finance, advanced accounting, and audit. In contrast, in business law I was able to score a 4.0 (88 final grade.
This is one of the reasons I feel I am more suited to essay-style writing/research courses and it is one of the reasons I am pursuing law. I was also playing varsity sports and working a lot of hours during my last two years ( I got a part-time corporate sales job).
I have excellent extra-curriculars and good references which is why I think I still have a shot at getting into law school if I score well on the lsat.
Do you think it's useful to write an addenda to attempt to justify my poor performance in my last year/ sub-par performance in the last two years?
Thanks for your time and sorry for the long explanation...Any help would be appreciated!