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Posted: Wed Nov 13, 2013 9:20 pm
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That's nice, but there's a yawning gap between "the LSAT is the most important thing" and "in the vast majority of cases, your LSAT/GPA combo will be dispositive."TigerDude wrote:They pretty clearly said the LSAT is the single most important thing
What was the shot at TLS?MistakenGenius wrote:You should probably listen to what they have to say instead of making incorrect assumptions Malice. They were honest about how important the numbers were. They said the LSAT was by far the most important followed by the GPA. They said a personal statement can make them fall in love with you, but you have to have the numbers. In fact, one guy asked a question. He said that he had a high GPA, incredible recommendations, and a good personal statement but a low LSAT. He wanted to know if they'd overlook it. They said he has to have the LSAT and probably would not get in without it. They honestly sounded a lot like TLS, though they did take a shot at TLS at one point. However, they were still pretty much the opposite of holistic, but nice try.Ti Malice wrote:That's nice, but there's a yawning gap between "the LSAT is the most important thing" and "in the vast majority of cases, your LSAT/GPA combo will be dispositive."TigerDude wrote:They pretty clearly said the LSAT is the single most important thing
Nah, I don't really care what these particular people said -- at least not enough to spend time listening to their advice. Glad to hear they were straight-up about things. I just felt like dumping on adcomms/schools in general for their too-common invocation of holism when describing the admissions process. Try not to get so worked up about it.MistakenGenius wrote:You should probably listen to what they have to say instead of making incorrect assumptions Malice. They were honest about how important the numbers were. They said the LSAT was by far the most important followed by the GPA. They said a personal statement can make them fall in love with you, but you have to have the numbers. In fact, one guy asked a question. He said that he had a high GPA, incredible recommendations, and a good personal statement but a low LSAT. He wanted to know if they'd overlook it. They said he has to have the LSAT and probably would not get in without it. They honestly sounded a lot like TLS, though they did take a shot at TLS at one point. However, they were still pretty much the opposite of holistic, but nice try.Ti Malice wrote:That's nice, but there's a yawning gap between "the LSAT is the most important thing" and "in the vast majority of cases, your LSAT/GPA combo will be dispositive."TigerDude wrote:They pretty clearly said the LSAT is the single most important thing
I skipped around looking for it so I don't know if this is it but there was a part where they talked about law school messageboards and the host said he wouldn't mention any names because he didn't want to promote them. He seemed really disgusted when he said it for some reason. Then he said there are stories of people's posts having detrimental effects on their candidacy. The NYU admissions dude said that the boards are "unmoderated" and that people make stuff up. Then this horrible barren shitboomer shrew was like 'why are they asking questions on the internet when they could just call Fordham and ask us!' I had to turn it off after that.Cicero76 wrote:What was the shot at TLS?MistakenGenius wrote:You should probably listen to what they have to say instead of making incorrect assumptions Malice. They were honest about how important the numbers were. They said the LSAT was by far the most important followed by the GPA. They said a personal statement can make them fall in love with you, but you have to have the numbers. In fact, one guy asked a question. He said that he had a high GPA, incredible recommendations, and a good personal statement but a low LSAT. He wanted to know if they'd overlook it. They said he has to have the LSAT and probably would not get in without it. They honestly sounded a lot like TLS, though they did take a shot at TLS at one point. However, they were still pretty much the opposite of holistic, but nice try.Ti Malice wrote:That's nice, but there's a yawning gap between "the LSAT is the most important thing" and "in the vast majority of cases, your LSAT/GPA combo will be dispositive."TigerDude wrote:They pretty clearly said the LSAT is the single most important thing
I remember watching that part and being like "oh, he mad". But their reactions don't quite honestly surprise me at all.Ludovico Technique wrote: I skipped around looking for it so I don't know if this is it but there was a part where they talked about law school messageboards and the host said he wouldn't mention any names because he didn't want to promote them. He seemed really disgusted when he said it for some reason. Then he said there are stories of people's posts having detrimental effects on their candidacy. The NYU admissions dude said that the boards are "unmoderated" and that people make stuff up. Then this horrible barren shitboomer shrew was like 'why are they asking questions on the internet when they could just call Fordham and ask us!' I had to turn it off after that.
Of course Adcoms don't like TLS. We encourage people to retake until they will get $$$, not to ED in most cases, and not to apply to schools where they have no chance.vicpin5190 wrote:I remember watching that part and being like "oh, he mad". But their reactions don't quite honestly surprise me at all.Ludovico Technique wrote: I skipped around looking for it so I don't know if this is it but there was a part where they talked about law school messageboards and the host said he wouldn't mention any names because he didn't want to promote them. He seemed really disgusted when he said it for some reason. Then he said there are stories of people's posts having detrimental effects on their candidacy. The NYU admissions dude said that the boards are "unmoderated" and that people make stuff up. Then this horrible barren shitboomer shrew was like 'why are they asking questions on the internet when they could just call Fordham and ask us!' I had to turn it off after that.