4.0 and 165 into a top 6?
Posted: Sun Jan 09, 2011 6:49 pm
Hi everyone.
I'm applying really late into the cycle (still working on my Why Harvard/Why Yale essays), which I already think means a much lower chance than I could have had, but I wonder if my scores are anything other than a hail Mary to get into HYS or a T6. I have a 4.0 from my undergrad transfer university, a small private college I'm on full scholarship at which not highly ranked academically, only one student from my college ever got into HLS, only one ever into YLS, both URM's with lower LSAT scores than me. I also had a 3.85 from my community college before transferring but my undergrad shows me as a 4.0 because they don't transfer grades in. I took the LSAT twice while studying overseas getting a 165 both times, about 4 points lower than my average for Practice tests. I'm already 29 so I'm getting a bit old to wait a year and retake a third time. Will being over the 75% for G.P.A. but under the 25% for LSAT kill me in the T6?
I don't know what the average law school applicant has for soft factors/resume but I think mine are fairly good, I've already studied law at Oxford in England and received A equivalent grades there which only the top 15% of students in Oxford on average get. I'm also the president of my student law club and am spending my summer in Africa opening up a legal clinic. I was a firefighter.
I'm the son of a South American Immigrant on my mothers side and a white American on my father's side so I don't know if being half and half qualifies me as a URM since South American doesn't seem to get the Mexican or Puerto Rican bump. At least two of my recommendations state that I'm the best student that the professors have ever taught in their career. Do you think the soft factors and G.P.A. are enough to get into the that bottom 25 percentile of applicants below the LSAT cut off? Should I bother writing an addendum about a 165 not representing my true potential in law school or would it just sound contrite?
This news was heartbreaking, I've taken each and every practice LSAT and scored as high as a 171 before, and rarely scored lower than a 166, and since it's overseas I don't even get to check my answers since they're both non-disclosed.
I'm applying really late into the cycle (still working on my Why Harvard/Why Yale essays), which I already think means a much lower chance than I could have had, but I wonder if my scores are anything other than a hail Mary to get into HYS or a T6. I have a 4.0 from my undergrad transfer university, a small private college I'm on full scholarship at which not highly ranked academically, only one student from my college ever got into HLS, only one ever into YLS, both URM's with lower LSAT scores than me. I also had a 3.85 from my community college before transferring but my undergrad shows me as a 4.0 because they don't transfer grades in. I took the LSAT twice while studying overseas getting a 165 both times, about 4 points lower than my average for Practice tests. I'm already 29 so I'm getting a bit old to wait a year and retake a third time. Will being over the 75% for G.P.A. but under the 25% for LSAT kill me in the T6?
I don't know what the average law school applicant has for soft factors/resume but I think mine are fairly good, I've already studied law at Oxford in England and received A equivalent grades there which only the top 15% of students in Oxford on average get. I'm also the president of my student law club and am spending my summer in Africa opening up a legal clinic. I was a firefighter.
I'm the son of a South American Immigrant on my mothers side and a white American on my father's side so I don't know if being half and half qualifies me as a URM since South American doesn't seem to get the Mexican or Puerto Rican bump. At least two of my recommendations state that I'm the best student that the professors have ever taught in their career. Do you think the soft factors and G.P.A. are enough to get into the that bottom 25 percentile of applicants below the LSAT cut off? Should I bother writing an addendum about a 165 not representing my true potential in law school or would it just sound contrite?
This news was heartbreaking, I've taken each and every practice LSAT and scored as high as a 171 before, and rarely scored lower than a 166, and since it's overseas I don't even get to check my answers since they're both non-disclosed.