Hey Emily; I live in Tampa and am taking the June LSAT. I'm a college senior in USF--my highest practice test thus far is a 155, but if I took it now I think I'd hit 160. So, that's kind of where I'm at.
I read a lot of formal logic in college since I studied philosophy. I believe it helped me skip (or watch at high speed) some logic videos here. I wouldn't recommend formal logic books to someone who has the videos here.
Can you become a paralegal without an educational background? (ie: paralegal courses @ college) I have a business and economics undergrad, is that sufficient to apply? Also, thanks for the response, I appreciate the assistance
What kind of students should look at hiring a consultant or admissions help? If your scores are safely in the median/75% range, and you have a law school advisor at an Ivy League college,would you be okay without one?
I think JY has cursed in videos about two to three times at max. And your argument presumes both a specific definition of professionalism and also that its presence is inappropriate to an audience of college students.
What about the college itself? How would an undergrad at Cal Berkley compare to Pheonix Online or University of Hogwarts? Would the 4.0's be the same? I take it by your reasoning they would?
Your academic summary report on LSAC lists the mean GPA at your college and your percentile rank. This gives some indication of how difficult your school is and where you stand. Still, the major thing is a bit of mystery to me.