Internationalstudents that are already able to practice laws in other countries but want to practice in the US typically have to pass an ABA accredited LLM program. You could likely also do the reverse, earn a JD here and a masters degree abroad.
... the weight of softs versus lsat/gpa. Obvi lsat/gpa are great and super ... than most people's goal LSAT score.
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> ... 'm saying LSAT is most important followed by GPA followed by softs ...
... will increase their avg incoming LSAT scores. Without a competing offer ... to go elsewhere is a highLSAT score which will garner good ... willing to walk thr higher LSAT especially if it went from ... course ideally you get your high score earlier, but until you ...
... concepts since you have a high BR score. It seems like ... into the habit of writing low-res/high-res summaries, main point ... focus much more on hi/low res summaries. However, I will ...
... is a harsher one for internationalstudents since smaller law firms which ... the bureaucracy of hiring an international student. That's just a ... stronger still. But as an international student you might have a ...
... offer a small caveat to internationalstudents, who fall into a separate ... have little incentive to admit students from that specific group.** (The ... up approximately 10% of legal students. By contrast, those groups who ...
... offer a small caveat to internationalstudents, who fall into a separate ... have little incentive to admit students from that specific group.** (The ... up approximately 10% of legal students. By contrast, those groups who ...
> Thanks for the advice! I guess getting a highLSAT score will explain it naturally but I do agree on the financial responsibility part with you if the schools requires additional explanation
If you're committed to doing ED your stats make you a stronger candidate for Berkeley than for Northwestern as the former (which you state above) carries equal weight for GPA and LSAT. Obviously you'll include in the app that you are retaking the LSAT.
If you want q's in advance - I was going to ask in terms of %chance of getting in based on Gpa and Lsat score only (LSAC's calculator), what % is considered reach, target, and fall back?
I'll re ask at the end too :) thanks for hosting this
... pertain to internationalstudents with American undergraduate degrees. Students who checked "international" on ... be, for example, that internationalstudents tend to submit weaker applications ... make sense if many internationalstudents speak English as a ...
... for a firm's international offices (through business trips ... US firm that handles international clients might allow you ... sector for the government/international NGOs (Foreign Service, UN ... grads employed abroad are internationalstudents who got qualified in ...
You gpa and LSAT are below both medians, but not by a lot, so ED might be a good decision if you're absolutely sure that this is your top choice, and that you're willing to go regardless of whether or not you receive scholarships.
Depends on the school since different schools value GPA and LSAT differently, relatively speaking. However median LSAT and 75th GPA sounds like you'll have as good a shot as almost anyone.
You can find a predictor on the LSAC school search page that uses data from previous years. It allows you to input GPA and LSAT score and will output a % chance of admission for each school.