Do it in 2 pages if you can and don't write about why you want to go to law school, that is the biggest mistake people make. They just want to see you can write a coherent essay. The most important thing is to stand out and be original
If the desired length is "around two pages," do schools look down on statements slightly longer than two and/or view favorably those right at or under two? My current draft (which is close to my final) is just a few sentences over two pages, if that.
... better aesthetically to have full pages, so if you go ... able to fill those pages and it better be ... think sticking with 2 pages is best because it shows ... I started with 4 pages and whittled it down to ...
I also think 4 pages is really extreme. Just because ...
Oh I see. I'm guessing you used the "discuss" button? The questions appear to be from PTs 1-16 so they don't have video explanations or comment pages. We'd be happy to discuss them with you. You just need to post the PT#/Section#/Question# in the title.
@"Quick Silver" said:
I got into Berkeley Law and I'm sure my LSAT score made a big difference. I wouldn't have scored in the 99th percentile if it wasn't for 7sage.
Mine was 2 pages. Ideally this is what you should shoot for because most schools that have a limit it seems to be two pages. Applying to 13 schools I only had to tweak it for two, one wanted
Question by question is a time suck and breaks up momentum, and two pages risks more bubbling errors or forgetting to do it at all. Page by page keeps a steady rhythm to it.