@GenGen85 said:
I’m thinking of hiring a law school admission consultant, and I was wondering if anyone has any recommendations. I’m interested in Ann Levine, but I heard there are somw other options out there. Any experience or thoughts ?
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Wait so you're in school still or you graduated? Kind of confused.
If you finished your bachelor's already, taking more classes won't affect your LSAC GPA. Just go all out on the LSAT. By all out I mean get into the 160s and try to get a full ride …
I know of people who tried this for college admissions but unfortunately 23andme doesn't really confirm anything. Don't know if you can put in links on this forum but check out CDIB / Bureau of Indian Affairs to get your certificate/card
LSN is self-reported so not everyone is reporting their numbers nor is there any way of verifying its accuracy. Sure most of the numbers may be real but there are probably also people bullshitting numbers on there.
I would use the medians and perce…
@lsatkt179 said:
given that there is only a november (and not a december) test this year, would it hurt me to take the november lsat instead and apply then rather than taking the september and applying very soon? I'm a reapplicant and I ended …
depends on your goal. If you're within 3 points of your target, just take it. Highest score is what matters.
If you're 10 points from your target, just withdraw.
no just no. law school isn't a golden ticket to success or redemption or any nonsense like that. it should mean absolutely nothing when it comes to how you view a person.
stop taking tests and see what you're doing wrong. If you're scoring below 150 and finishing the test, you're simply doing way too much questions. 20 tests isn't really a lot. There are people who do every single test (80+) more than once
Get both. I actually had a US senator recommendation in the past too and it is likely that the person issuing the recommendation for him/her will just use the same template. In reality both will not really matter but just get both.
Good for you and for having self awareness. Very good trait. Law school will always be there. literally. If you don't have a terminal illness, there is absolutely no reason for you to rush the LSAT and rush going to law school.
something related to playing college football would make for a great essay. Just don't be cliche and talk about some difficulty and how you persevered and overcame that adversity.
There is literally nothing you can do to change your GPA now..stop thinking about it. The bottom line is yes it puts you at an disadvantage. The great thing is however that the most important part of admissions is still in your control..the LSAT.
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