@TheLoftGuy was there stories of stolen test this cycle?
I feel like im going crazy imagine waking up tomorrow with a letter from LSAC saying we all have to rewrite because and entire virus game was removed from scoring or something
@DEC_LSAT If I had thousands of applications to read, I'd be irritated (1) by someone overselling her "diversity", and (2) by someone who made me read an essay that didn't tell me anything relevant or interesting.
Yeah December, but it's a rewrite and my target score isn't substantially high so as to postpone. I need literally anything above 155 to get into a Canadian school.
@"Accounts Playable" Thank you so much for your time!! Amazing how you covered so many different aspects of LSAT from specific questions, strategies on different sections and the application/essay process:)
@twssmith said:
Amazing how you covered so many different aspects of LSAT from specific questions, strategies on different sections and the application/essay process:)
This has a strong "Why Penn?" correlation, but yea as Alex said, discuss in detail how you're a good match for Penn; that's usually what's required in a "why X" essay anyway. Keep it concise, too.
... of depends on the actual essay. If you write a "Why ... School X" essay and you really don't ... think in that situation that essay is moot at best and ...
Most schools that I've seen have prompts/allow for optional essays. You should write an optional essay if you have something to say. If you don't have anything meaningful to write about, then that essay is, at best, not going to help you.
Did anyone else have the survey over how comfortable they would be writing an essay on a touch screen? I chose that I was 100% uncomfortable with technology. I don't want to take it again on a tablet.