Thanks for the encouragement. Does anyone have any advice for other things I can do to make my application more attractive? Should I write an addendum? Should I pursue certain extra curriculars? Should I get a part time job?
And -- you will almost have to write an addendum for that score, but whatever you do, do NOT gear it towards "I was lazy but now I'm not". If there are legit medical issues, focus on that.
@jddckery I recall from one of the lsat tutors that LSAC provides additional time to those who have ADHD and have the medical proof. You should look into it!
... *several* qualifying disabilities--including ADHD--heavily-documented for well over ... less "popular" diagnoses than ADHD, I'm not counting on ... work harder than others without ADHD. But your chances of ... -like about things like ADHD and accommodations and I ...
@Patrick :D Hey thanks for the reply! It's great to hear that you were able to raise you score after the first exam! Also, where can I add the addendum?
As part of your law school application, a majority of schools allow you to write a one-page addendum describing a specific difficulty you had with your test taking process; in your example your father's situation.
I think I would avoid the addendum bc it did not really interfere with your ability to take the test or mental state for the test itself, just backtracked ur studying a bit (from what Im interpreting that as)