I doubt it. I’ve been out of school a long time. I tried getting lor from professors but couldn’t do I have work lor. It is what it is. It’s not required that one come from a professor.
Yup, you can def ask now. Alternatively, you could let her know now and just submit the request closer to when you’ll be submitting. If they know you well enough to write a LOR, they shouldn’t forget over the summer. Don’t worry about dates
I got a LOR from my boss and I’m still waiting g to hear from his Alma mater. Every day he passes by my desk and he never says anything but I can tell he wants to know. You and me both
Just one you can send to multiple schools unless you also want that individual to write an additional LOR specific to a school. Hope this answers your question.
... />
It's ok to reuse LOR, but if it can sometimes ... dates and things. Email your LOR writers if you want them ... can get one new good LOR to add, do that. Nevertheless ... , reusing all LOR from the previous year is ...
I vote for the "Advice for Recommenders" topic. You can send the link or screenshot and it seems less aggressive than personally typing out a list of LOR advice because it's coming from a formal Law School Application-related service.
... they want a non-academic LOR you should probably choose someone ... the person who writes your LOR. The admissions people just want ... are able to acquire a LOR from a work/school supervisor ... . Once you have the required LOR's the admissions office just ...
... they want a non-academic LOR you should probably choose someone ... the person who writes your LOR. The admissions people just want ... . Once you have the required LOR's the admissions office just ... my peer supervisors write a lor for law school . Nothing against ...
... they want a non-academic LOR you should probably choose someone ... the person who writes your LOR. The admissions people just want ... . Once you have the required LOR's the admissions office just ... my peer supervisors write a lor for law school . Nothing against ...
If by high you mean 3.7 plus you might be able to get in with a lower Lsat , but that depends on the exact cgpa and your softs (lor ecs, personal statement) and the school you want to get into . For example western is mostly a numbers school
I'm in a similar situation, but I don't think there's an issue with having LOR's from last year. If anything, maybe suggest to them to change the date, but for the most part it should be fine.