My Dilemma
Posted: Thu Jun 03, 2010 12:07 am
OK so here's the preamble.. I took the LSAT prematurely in Feb. and due to a combination of insufficient prep time, me freaking out, and horrible testing conditions, i laid a big goose egg (148). I was rejected to all of the schools that i applied to except Rutgers-Camden (I signed up for waitlist for PT and FT programs but i plan on switching to FT asap), which waitlisted me. I am a Rutgers UG alum, lifelong NJ native, and I contribute to the overall diversity of the school with my background and bilingualism.
I am well aware that me being waitlisted with the aforementioned LSAT score is definitely a "soft rejection." However, I am still ready to try and get off of it with whatever means necessary. I'm taking a couple of accelerated philosophy courses at my community college to increase my GPA to a 3.1, and I made sure to get 3 really good LORs from my prior internship at the AG's office before I left (RU has 5 in total now from me, hooray). Plus, I was hoping that I would have had enough prep time to get myself back in gear for the LSAT so that i could potentially replace that shitty score they have on file. So up to this point, they see that i'm doing everything that i can to get off this stupid waitlist (I've written an LOCI as well).
I have gotten a lot better on the LSAT, but I am still having trouble with RC. I would be in the high 160's by now if it wasn't for RC. I am scheduled to take the LSAT on Saturday, and although I feel confident that I could score somewhere in the high 150's, it would be my 2nd retake, and I know that if I took the test in October with even more prep, I would do even better. This, of course, would mean dooming my chances of getting into RU for the upcoming year.
So here's my dilemma people- I desperately do not want to take a year off. I would rather start law school on 2 days notice that I've been accepted than to take a year off despite being confident that I can find a legal job to add to my resume during my off year. And before anybody suggests to travel the world - that is not an option unfortunately.
Although I cringe at the thought of taking a year off, I am willing to accept it because of how much good could potentially come from it. With that said, do I cancel my score after I take the test on Saturday? It would SUCK for me to let the score stand, not get admitted to RU, and then retake for the 3rd time in October when I know I'd do better.
The real answer to the riddle is figuring out what LSAT score would be sufficient to get me off of the Rutgers Camden waitlist pool (they don't make their waitlist rankings until July 1st). Since its impossible to tell, and since we cant tell what the likelihood is of getting in with a mediocre score (154-156), are the odds for admission into this petty school too great to risk having a 150-range LSAT score on my file (2nd time taking the test as well)?
So there it is guys. Although I anxiously want to gamble my chances at doing well enough on the June LSAT to get off the waitlist, I'm considering the long term implications if this scenario were to fail. I'm taking the test regardless for the experience if nothing else. The issue with letting the score stand is that I don't want another test on my record if I know that I'll be taking it again in Oct (and maybe again after that if I actually get accepted this cycle).* But then again, if I knew that letting the score stand would get me in, I would take it in a heartbeat.
So do I cancel June? or roll the dice? or wait till after the test to decide?
*To my defense, I applied extremely late in the cycle because the Feb LSAT was the first test that I had time (5 weeks) to study for.
I am well aware that me being waitlisted with the aforementioned LSAT score is definitely a "soft rejection." However, I am still ready to try and get off of it with whatever means necessary. I'm taking a couple of accelerated philosophy courses at my community college to increase my GPA to a 3.1, and I made sure to get 3 really good LORs from my prior internship at the AG's office before I left (RU has 5 in total now from me, hooray). Plus, I was hoping that I would have had enough prep time to get myself back in gear for the LSAT so that i could potentially replace that shitty score they have on file. So up to this point, they see that i'm doing everything that i can to get off this stupid waitlist (I've written an LOCI as well).
I have gotten a lot better on the LSAT, but I am still having trouble with RC. I would be in the high 160's by now if it wasn't for RC. I am scheduled to take the LSAT on Saturday, and although I feel confident that I could score somewhere in the high 150's, it would be my 2nd retake, and I know that if I took the test in October with even more prep, I would do even better. This, of course, would mean dooming my chances of getting into RU for the upcoming year.
So here's my dilemma people- I desperately do not want to take a year off. I would rather start law school on 2 days notice that I've been accepted than to take a year off despite being confident that I can find a legal job to add to my resume during my off year. And before anybody suggests to travel the world - that is not an option unfortunately.
Although I cringe at the thought of taking a year off, I am willing to accept it because of how much good could potentially come from it. With that said, do I cancel my score after I take the test on Saturday? It would SUCK for me to let the score stand, not get admitted to RU, and then retake for the 3rd time in October when I know I'd do better.
The real answer to the riddle is figuring out what LSAT score would be sufficient to get me off of the Rutgers Camden waitlist pool (they don't make their waitlist rankings until July 1st). Since its impossible to tell, and since we cant tell what the likelihood is of getting in with a mediocre score (154-156), are the odds for admission into this petty school too great to risk having a 150-range LSAT score on my file (2nd time taking the test as well)?
So there it is guys. Although I anxiously want to gamble my chances at doing well enough on the June LSAT to get off the waitlist, I'm considering the long term implications if this scenario were to fail. I'm taking the test regardless for the experience if nothing else. The issue with letting the score stand is that I don't want another test on my record if I know that I'll be taking it again in Oct (and maybe again after that if I actually get accepted this cycle).* But then again, if I knew that letting the score stand would get me in, I would take it in a heartbeat.
So do I cancel June? or roll the dice? or wait till after the test to decide?
*To my defense, I applied extremely late in the cycle because the Feb LSAT was the first test that I had time (5 weeks) to study for.