If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it... Forum
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If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
And probably don't have a chance of getting into the school you want to get in to...are you better off letting it ride and seeing what happens, then re-resting and re-applying next cycle if you indeed don't make it? Or are you better off withdrawing your app first before trying again?
- kittenmittons
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
If you have a particular school in mind, I'd let it ride and re-apply if necessary.SoCalKevin wrote:And probably don't have a chance of getting into the school you want to get in to...are you better off letting it ride and seeing what happens, then re-resting and re-applying next cycle if you indeed don't make it? Or are you better off withdrawing your app first before trying again?
- hwstewart
- Posts: 54
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
Its unclear whether you're applying in this years cycle or are applying for admission next year. If the latter then it depends what you're shooting for and what your overall expectations are for law and your career. This place tends to be a vacuum for insecurity and very narrowly defined ideas of what it takes to have a very successful and rewarding legal career. If you only paid attention to certain threads you might believe that the only criterion for being a fulfilled (and gainfully employed) lawyer is to be in the upper echelon of t-10 (some might even say YHS) and to then subsequently fall in the rank and file of biglaw. This is distinctly untrue. Yes, the current job market makes lower ranked schools bear a higher necessity to perform well and rank higher in order to have choice job prospects. But it does not preclude you from having a great career.
I did find out that I blew my LSAT score last year. In fact I found out twice. When I retook in Dec. my score actually went down! I certainly thought about withdrwing my apps from this years cycle, thinking the hill to high to climb. But, I knew I could perform better and went all in on a third take and went up 13 points. I now have great options and nice scholarships as well. The overall point is, have faith in yourself and get real about your career. IF you believe you can do better, you can.
I did find out that I blew my LSAT score last year. In fact I found out twice. When I retook in Dec. my score actually went down! I certainly thought about withdrwing my apps from this years cycle, thinking the hill to high to climb. But, I knew I could perform better and went all in on a third take and went up 13 points. I now have great options and nice scholarships as well. The overall point is, have faith in yourself and get real about your career. IF you believe you can do better, you can.
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
i took it in june 2 years ago and found out i blew it. was very devastated b/c I had dreams of T14. Retook it and scored better and everything worked out fine.
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
I took it for the first time this February- so it's my only chance for this cycle. If I blow it, goodbye 2010 L1. Does that change any of the answers here?
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
If you have the $ to apply to these schools, why not apply anyway? Unless schools punish people applying for a second time (I don't think this is the case) the absolute worst thing that could happen is that you'd be rejected, right?SoCalKevin wrote:I took it for the first time this February- so it's my only chance for this cycle. If I blow it, goodbye 2010 L1. Does that change any of the answers here?
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
If that is the case, re-take in June and do the next cycle. Feb. is late for this cycle anyway (my test is a re-take).SoCalKevin wrote:I took it for the first time this February- so it's my only chance for this cycle. If I blow it, goodbye 2010 L1. Does that change any of the answers here?
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
dynomite wrote:If you have the $ to apply to these schools, why not apply anyway? Unless schools punish people applying for a second time (I don't think this is the case) the absolute worst thing that could happen is that you'd be rejected, right?SoCalKevin wrote:I took it for the first time this February- so it's my only chance for this cycle. If I blow it, goodbye 2010 L1. Does that change any of the answers here?
That's what I was looking for...thanks.
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
I have heard from students, although never actually from admissions, that being rejected can hurt your chances if you reapply to that same school. Maybe someone else can comment, but it does make some sense. I am in a similar boat.
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Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
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Last edited by lawschoollll on Fri Mar 11, 2011 6:17 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- jks289
- Posts: 1415
- Joined: Sun Nov 01, 2009 9:42 pm
Re: If, when you get your scor,e you find out you blew it...
I don't see any reason why it would hurt. Maybe if you applied with the exact same application twice, it would look bad. But if you decide to take another year, improve your work experience, numbers, personal statement etc I think it looks like you are really comitted to their particular law school and not just looking to go to whatever school will take you.lawschoollll wrote:I would love to know the answer to this as well. I have a hard time believing it true (especially if you come back with a new LSAT score), but then again, there is that, "Have you applied to XXX in prior years?" question on every app...abulmash wrote:I have heard from students, although never actually from admissions, that being rejected can hurt your chances if you reapply to that same school. Maybe someone else can comment, but it does make some sense. I am in a similar boat.
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