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Hi 7Sagers,
On Wednesday, June 14, at 9 p.m. EST, I’ll give you a bird’s-eye view of the admissions process. We’ll touch on almost every component of your application:
I’ll take questions at the end.
Admissions Overview Webinar
Wed, Jun 14, 2017 9:00 PM - 10:00 PM EDT
Please join my meeting from your computer, tablet or smartphone: https://global.gotomeeting.com/join/913345029
You can also dial in using your phone.
United States: +1 (571) 317-3122
Access Code: 913-345-029
First GoToMeeting? Try a test session: https://care.citrixonline.com/g2m/getready
Comments
Definitely have a question about Personal statements vs. Diversity statements and if I should write both if my Personal Statement sort of seems to accomplish what I'd want in a DS.
See you next week!
Yeah Alex I have a very similar question!
Looking forward to it! It'll be weird spending a weekday evening NOT studying for the LSAT...
I'm not available at the time of the webinar. Will this webinar be recorded? If so, will I be able to access the recording of it?
It seems like other folks have similar questions as me regarding Diversity Statements and I think that this will be captured in this webinar but I just want to put my questions out there. Obviously there are many ways to be diverse beyond nationality, ethnicity, sexual orientation, etc. but I think it still holds that spaces like law school still need to become diverse in these ways. As an immigrant, queer woman of color I don't want to capitalize on my identities but how do recognize my experience in a meaningful way that captures this and also goes beyond this conventional ideas of diversity? I haven't made up my mind yet on what I want to write about in my personal statement but I'm sure my experiences as an immigrant, queer woman of color will be inherently as part of what I write though not necessarily outwardly stated in this way. How could I write a meaningful diversity statement that is independent of my personal statement but is a complement to it.
Other question re: Extenuating circumstances addenda:
Though I don't necessarily think that my case is an "extenuating circumstance" I feel like this addenda is a great opportunity to address some of the gaps in my transcript. I mostly got A's and B's in undergrad but there are a couple of sprinkles of lower grades and a time where I had to drop a class. Throughout undergrad I had to piece together 2 - 3 jobs (which wasn't unusual around the people I knew) and was part of a lot different orgs which cause me to not prioritize specific classes -- would admitting this make it seem more like a weakness? I could see how I can write it in better light something along the lines of learning how to manage and balance, etc...
Thanks! If you have a chance to address this during the webinar that would be amazing!
Yay! Love David's webinars!
I would love to hear any insight you have for nontraditional applicants (those of us who will be over 30 with significant career experience and haven't been in school for a while). Any tidbits on how the process may differ for us versus the "traditional" applicant pool would be great if you have them!
Darn, I forgot about it. Is a recording of the Webinar available?
Thank you for doing this. Same question...was this recorded?
It was recorded! I'll post here when it goes up.
The webinar is up! https://7sage.com/webinar/intro-to-admissions/
Thank you!