Choosing school in New England
Posted: Sat Mar 08, 2014 11:27 am
Hey there everyone. I am in the midst of my decision making process and would like some honest feedback.
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-The schools you are considering
-The total Cost of Attendance (COA) of each. COA = cost of tuition + fees + books + cost of living (COL) + accumulated interest - scholarships. Here is a helpful calculator.
-How you will be financing your COA, i.e. loans, family, or savings
-Where you are from and where you want to work, and other places where you have significant ties (if any)
-Your general career goals
-Your LSAT/GPA numbers
-How many times you have taken the LSAT
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First off, I am from CT and went to college in Massachusetts. I want to work in Boston after graduation and have significant ties in Boston/MA and Hartford.
I wouldn't say I have general career goals. I want to concentrate my practice in civil defense doing environmental, toxic torts, products liability. I have had a few internships, took classes abroad and now work full time as a legal assistant. Through this I have seen quite a bit of the legal practice and have found what I liked (and more importantly what I haven't liked).
I graduated with a B.A. in Economics, Spanish and Political science. Unfortunately, my GPA was far from stellar, finishing with a 3.1 (due to some poor elective class choices and a less than ideal freshman year)
My first LSAT I took October 2012. I was PTing in the 165 range and absolutely shit the bed on test day scoring a 147. I was very discouraged with that result and didn't get my act together until after graduation. I really studied my ass off for October '13 LSAT and got a 163. I know to many on this board this is a shit score, but I'm glad I actually scored to my abilities. I debated taking for a third time, but seeing as my best PT's weren't far off and didn't want to risk scoring below that.
Schools I applied to (All New England)
UConn (Evening Division) - Accepted - 15k First year merit scholarship (Still waiting to hear on need based grant), puts total tuition for 3 years under 60K. Total COA is the same as I have family that lives ten minutes from the campus. I would be working close to full time and have enough saved so that I wouldn't have to take loans.
Northeastern - Accepted - 90k plus 8,000 in stipend money. Total tuition would cost roughly 40K, total COA with living costs would be over 60k. ( I sent a negotiation letter yesterday. I saw somewhere they don't negotiate but it can't hurt to try)
Boston University - No decision yet - Figure if I'm even accepted I will be paying sticker.Total COA would be upwards of 175K -
Boston College - Boston University - No decision yet - Figure if I'm even accepted I will be paying sticker.Total COA would be upwards of 175K
Tier 3/4
Western New England - Accepted - Full ride, would commute from Hartford Ct to Springfield if I went. COA = 0
Rogerwilliams (RI) - Accepted - Full ride. Only pay living expenses
New England School of Law - Accepted - Full ride (Living expenses in Boston)
Suffolk - Accepted - No scholarship info yet.
_______________________________________________
At this point my decision is boiling down to UConn v. Northeastern. I have grown up down the street from UConn law my whole life. It is a beautiful campus, great faculty and I have a great feeling about the new Dean and the direction he will take the school. However, I want to work in Boston and have my concerns about how UConn will get me there.
Northeastern is very appealing to me because of their co-op system. It is really the only school I am considering in Boston at the moment because of the financial considerations.
Kicker is, I am still considering taking in June and maybe sitting out a cycle if I improve, or hope it will get me better money from my current considerations.
What do you think? Fire away
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
-The schools you are considering
-The total Cost of Attendance (COA) of each. COA = cost of tuition + fees + books + cost of living (COL) + accumulated interest - scholarships. Here is a helpful calculator.
-How you will be financing your COA, i.e. loans, family, or savings
-Where you are from and where you want to work, and other places where you have significant ties (if any)
-Your general career goals
-Your LSAT/GPA numbers
-How many times you have taken the LSAT
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
First off, I am from CT and went to college in Massachusetts. I want to work in Boston after graduation and have significant ties in Boston/MA and Hartford.
I wouldn't say I have general career goals. I want to concentrate my practice in civil defense doing environmental, toxic torts, products liability. I have had a few internships, took classes abroad and now work full time as a legal assistant. Through this I have seen quite a bit of the legal practice and have found what I liked (and more importantly what I haven't liked).
I graduated with a B.A. in Economics, Spanish and Political science. Unfortunately, my GPA was far from stellar, finishing with a 3.1 (due to some poor elective class choices and a less than ideal freshman year)
My first LSAT I took October 2012. I was PTing in the 165 range and absolutely shit the bed on test day scoring a 147. I was very discouraged with that result and didn't get my act together until after graduation. I really studied my ass off for October '13 LSAT and got a 163. I know to many on this board this is a shit score, but I'm glad I actually scored to my abilities. I debated taking for a third time, but seeing as my best PT's weren't far off and didn't want to risk scoring below that.
Schools I applied to (All New England)
UConn (Evening Division) - Accepted - 15k First year merit scholarship (Still waiting to hear on need based grant), puts total tuition for 3 years under 60K. Total COA is the same as I have family that lives ten minutes from the campus. I would be working close to full time and have enough saved so that I wouldn't have to take loans.
Northeastern - Accepted - 90k plus 8,000 in stipend money. Total tuition would cost roughly 40K, total COA with living costs would be over 60k. ( I sent a negotiation letter yesterday. I saw somewhere they don't negotiate but it can't hurt to try)
Boston University - No decision yet - Figure if I'm even accepted I will be paying sticker.Total COA would be upwards of 175K -
Boston College - Boston University - No decision yet - Figure if I'm even accepted I will be paying sticker.Total COA would be upwards of 175K
Tier 3/4
Western New England - Accepted - Full ride, would commute from Hartford Ct to Springfield if I went. COA = 0
Rogerwilliams (RI) - Accepted - Full ride. Only pay living expenses
New England School of Law - Accepted - Full ride (Living expenses in Boston)
Suffolk - Accepted - No scholarship info yet.
_______________________________________________
At this point my decision is boiling down to UConn v. Northeastern. I have grown up down the street from UConn law my whole life. It is a beautiful campus, great faculty and I have a great feeling about the new Dean and the direction he will take the school. However, I want to work in Boston and have my concerns about how UConn will get me there.
Northeastern is very appealing to me because of their co-op system. It is really the only school I am considering in Boston at the moment because of the financial considerations.
Kicker is, I am still considering taking in June and maybe sitting out a cycle if I improve, or hope it will get me better money from my current considerations.
What do you think? Fire away