Every case is unique, and if you feel like you can defend your case, you can always write an addendum (although youthful freedoms running amuck probably won't cut it).too old for this sh* wrote:Hopefully I am not breaching forum etiquette here by blowing this much dust off of a thread, but...
...as I read about impact of earlier grades on LSDAC computations, I stumbled upon this thread (among others) that described my situation, specifically a semester from hell but where everything was repeated later in life and where I ultimately finished in the top 4 in the class for work performed in residence at the degree-granting institution.
I do take some umbrage to the following statements:
Not all freshmen are 18. I was actually a full time student at the age of 17 and managed to piss away a full honors scholarship as a consequence of youthful freedoms run amuck. Throw in a major knee injury while living in a dorm that lacked elevators and it was truly the semester from hell.ViP wrote:You said that you failed "a bunch of classes" during your first two years... Not one, not two, but "a bunch" of classes...
Of course, in a just universe, your LSAC GPA will suffer as a result.
The fact that you were 18 is not a justifiable excuse. Every freshmen in college is 18...
But just for the twist of fate's knife, I would find out several years later that my withdrawals had not been processed for four of the courses. Consequently I was stuck with twelve hours of zero point zero, all prior to the age of 18. I did not expend much time tracking down or attempting to fix the problem at the time because it did not impact my later completion of requirements for my degree. You can imagine the fun of trying to correct the problem more than 25 years from the last time I had to consider the semester from hell.
What does not add up is that the present system seems to unfairly penalize those that, for whatever reason, had a poor semester very early in life and then got on with their academic career, even if many years later. I'm still over 3.x even with the 12 hours included in any recalculation, but when viewing past academic performance, do you really want to tell me that a poor semester at the age of 17 should offset a top 5 graduation more than a decade later (and that was done while working full time) AND where an extensive body of work in the area of criminal law speaks to abilities?Your aptitude for law school is not in question. LSAC doesn't grant strong GPAs to those who qualify for law school, but rather to those who performed strongly in undergrad. How does that not add up?
It seems as though too much attention is placed on variables that do not really provide a true measure of one's ability to succeed in law school when one is pursuing the JD many years after the receipt of an undergraduate degree...
And yes, your poor semester at age 17 should definitely be considered. Why shouldn't it? If you had a serious emergency at that time in your life, it's absolutely terrible and you should write an addendum (this is precisely why addenda exist). But if your excuse is "I was young and immature," I find absolutely no reason for anyone to sympathize with you. That's all I'm trying to say.
Plus, in your specific case, you graduated more than a decade after screwing up... Your case is hardly typical. Addendum or no addendum, you're a non-traditional applicant and you'll be reviewed differently.