They will look at the average--whatever LSAC gives them, but they also look at trends--and your grades went up and not down, so they'll factor that in. Of course, LSAT matters heavily so focus on that and don't worry about GPA.
There is also a way to add a letter of recommendation from the same recommender. I know because I did this--I think you need to send a new request, as if its from a new person, even though its the same person submitting it. Just do it with a differe…
I just want to point out that when you speak a professor from a top ten law school they are likely to have a very strong bias of going to a higher ranked school because that is where they are. I would say take what they say with a grain of salt. Alt…
I think something to think about is because Cardozo is so new, many of the people who go there or the alumnae who graduated from there care very much about helping out the students who are there now.
I would definitely say Cardozo is better than Se…
I was told by people including admissions officers from law school that you don't need to put your GPA on your resume for law school applications because they already have both.
They said also if you do, you can pick which one to put on, just don't…
Also, we had admission forums at my school and they said now it is something that they can definitely look at. Before the digital, they said, they couldn't always read any of them so many times it wasn't worth it, but now that everything is digital…
I don't think that really the LSAT says anything about how smart a person is. Its written in a certain way and I think there are many people who do well later in life or in law school may not do well on the LSAT
I don't think its a problem to be indecisive about two kinds. Most people go in with no idea of what kind of law they want to do. Wavering between two kinds of law-if you have a solid reason for doing either is not a problem. Admission knows this an…
I think you can also still send your applications in, just LSAC won't send your report anyways, so there's no harm in waiting till its all ready. For some schools though, it may make a difference, so I would call the schools and ask what they recomm…
I agree with the above comment, but I would strongly suggest that you look for other people who can also write strong LOR's for you, maybe from school or other people from work. I also think it might depend on who's looking at it and that if you hav…
I would push it off until January and then work it out from there based on what you get and where you want to go. Even if you take January, you can wait until next year or you can apply to schools this year. It really depends on where you want to go…
It very well may not be enough time. After taking the practice test see where you are and if you're lower than where you wanna be by more than a few points, you should probably postpone
I think if the personal statement is very good then more can sometimes be less. Meaning that sometimes its better to keep it shorter anyways, so if you go below the word count I don't think they will hold it against you unless you have ideas that ar…
I think it depends what you want to do and also take into account the cost of attending each of those schools. That can make a huge difference because all those schools are amazing.
I know an LSAT instructor who gives his class a diagnostic because he knows most students want it, but he feels its a waste of time. It's sort of like going into a biology test cold. You know nothing and don't know how to answer the questions. Your …
Definitely don't write an addendum explaining that for your first one you were not prepared. I think you could do one though for the next one explaining your illness, although first get more opinions on that one.