@c.janson35 said:
No amount of studying, undergrad school ranking, or undergradGPA entitles you to a high score. The only thing you can do is to keep plugging along!
... . It's true that only undergradGPA (specifically LSAC calculated) matters for ... , note any trends in your undergradGPA. Did you nail your last ...
Following. I am also interested how graduate work impacts the admissions equation. Personally, I have a few units from multiple schools at the graduate level, but no degree. My undergradGPA is alright 3.81, but my grad is better 3.93.
... might look better than one low and one high score. ... Can you rely on your GPA? Not really. The LSAT ... schools. An extremely low LSAT and high GPA will not get ... the school. If your GPA is in the 75 percentile ... chances will be pretty low. LSAT>GPA>SOFTS for ...
... might look better than one low and one high score. ... Can you rely on your GPA? Not really. The LSAT ... schools. An extremely low LSAT and high GPA will not get ... the school. If your GPA is in the 75 percentile ... chances will be pretty low. LSAT>GPA>SOFTS for ...
Thank you! That's a good attitude to approach it with. I doubt law school admissions would look negatively on someone for submitting too many transcripts. They really only care about LSAT and undergradGPA.
... only care about LSAT and undergradGPA.
Well right, but admissions ... 't used for your LSAC GPA :P but yeah, either way ... they have that golden LSAC GPA number
I am quite certain LSAC will only take into account your undergradGPA, so your LSAC GPA will likely be around 3.18 (though sometimes it fluctuates slightly). Any courses you take post-first undergraduate degree do not count towards LSAC GPA.