... . Your best chance in the T14 is Georgetown. If you had ... retake to get into a T14. Barring URM status, the applicants with ... low LSAT scores who the T14 takes ...
... want to go to a T14, and every other component of ... very strong. I am a URM, great personal and diversity statement ... would make me a strong splitter, so that is my new ... want to go to a T14. Any help is REALLY appreciated ...
Finding information on what to do as a splitter ... , I wouldn't be a splitter at all. I would assume ... applicants that get rejected from t14's each year.
... most schools are more splitter friendly than reverse splitter friendly. Reverse splitters ... -165 for example in the T14). Splitters, on the other hand ... in the T14. Of course, if you're a URM then these ... bit looser than with non-URM applicants. If you have a ...
... real wild card is URM status which can be ... general, the prevalence of splitter friendly schools versus the ... true even for reverse splitter friendly schools like Berkeley). ... If you are a URM then this can shift ... ever since (in the T14) by simply maintaining the ...
URM is pretty much the biggest ... a splitter, but in general there are schools in the T14 that ... not nearly as much as URM status. Having work experience will ...
... your near perfect GPA and URM status I would not really ... you would do in the T14, especially if your softs are ... love GPA and are reverse splitter friendly are very good choices ...
... , being in the military, being URM, being international, anything non-traditional ... want to be in the T14, you most likely need to ... LSAT means you are a "splitter."
... make into one of the T14, even though my confidence has ... it into one of the T14, then I'm a pretty ... LS at one of the T14, even though he's working ... it into at least one T14.
((*I took the ... about considering applying to any T14.))
... law" you HAVE to get T14. My questions is, why 14 ... emphasis on the idea of T14. So really, two questions, to ... the running for most of T14. I am about 90% sure ...
Just curious if being significantly older than most students applying to law school (lets say hypothetically speaking 20+ years) would qualify you as being URM? Not that I would actually know anyone who was of course :)