What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have? Forum
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What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
I've already used a P on a GE class before and I was thinking about using another one this quarter. I'm not doing so hot in the class (currently at a B-). The only thing is, the class is Spanish 2 and next quarter I have to take Spanish 3, which I'm afraid I might not do well in as well based on my Spanish 2 performance. Languages are my vice
Anyways, people have told me 1 or 2 P's are okay, but 3 is really stretching it. What do you guys think?
Anyways, people have told me 1 or 2 P's are okay, but 3 is really stretching it. What do you guys think?
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
Pass/No Pass... It doesn't matter. Just get a decent GPA. What really matters is the LSAT. Focus your resources there.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
Uh I don't think that's an accurate statement. And what is "decent" GPA suppose to mean? That's so relative. For the record, my GPA is at 3.59 right now. Do you think it'll make a difference if it drops down to 3.58 or goes up to 3.60?
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
To me, a decent GPA is higher than 3.50 because it doesn't disqualify one from most schools.
"Do you think it'll make a difference if it drops down to 3.58 or goes up to 3.60?"
NO
"What really matters is the LSAT. Focus your resources there." Don't believe me? Look at these data:
Emory 2009-2010 cycle:
http://emory.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats ... Cycle=1011
or
Washington University in St Louis 2009-2010 cycle:
http://washu.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats ... Cycle=1011
Do you see what a mere 1-point difference in the LSAT can do?
Some school care a bit more about GPA than the two examples I mentioned, but at the end of the day all schools care far more about the LSAT than GPA. Peruse the lawschoolnumbers.com website and see what numbers you need for what you want.
"Do you think it'll make a difference if it drops down to 3.58 or goes up to 3.60?"
NO
"What really matters is the LSAT. Focus your resources there." Don't believe me? Look at these data:
Emory 2009-2010 cycle:
http://emory.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats ... Cycle=1011
or
Washington University in St Louis 2009-2010 cycle:
http://washu.lawschoolnumbers.com/stats ... Cycle=1011
Do you see what a mere 1-point difference in the LSAT can do?
Some school care a bit more about GPA than the two examples I mentioned, but at the end of the day all schools care far more about the LSAT than GPA. Peruse the lawschoolnumbers.com website and see what numbers you need for what you want.
Last edited by javancho on Fri Feb 11, 2011 12:59 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
I took two classes P/NP during the second semester of my junior year and two classes P/NP the summer after. Things are working out pretty well right now. I had a good reason though and sent an addendum just to be safe but I don't think it would have mattered.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
Who instilled the notion that schools scour your transcripts and look at every single class and make heavy handed decisions based on this ? 2 or 3 classes pass fail = slacker? bad student ? loser ? I have probably the most W's out of anyone on TLS on my transcript and my cycle is going great. Like the guy the other day who contemplated an addendum for All A's and 1 C - cmon.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
Agree. It seems that a lot of schools have pretty bad pre-law advisers. They should be replaced by TLSers.Sandro wrote:Who instilled the notion that schools scour your transcripts and look at every single class and make heavy handed decisions based on this ? 2 or 3 classes pass fail = slacker? bad student ? loser ? I have probably the most W's out of anyone on TLS on my transcript and my cycle is going great. Like the guy the other day who contemplated an addendum for All A's and 1 C - cmon.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
Imagine if they all were on TLS - law school applications would drop 75% because they would tell half the kids to ED to UVA or wait 2 years and ED to NW/Retakejavancho wrote:Agree. It seems that a lot of schools have pretty bad pre-law advisers. They should be replaced by TLSers.Sandro wrote:Who instilled the notion that schools scour your transcripts and look at every single class and make heavy handed decisions based on this ? 2 or 3 classes pass fail = slacker? bad student ? loser ? I have probably the most W's out of anyone on TLS on my transcript and my cycle is going great. Like the guy the other day who contemplated an addendum for All A's and 1 C - cmon.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
and employment prospects would increase dramatically.
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
I'm still skeptical, but basically you guys are saying that having a total of 3 pass/no pass credits are acceptable and easily overlooked? And FWIW, the classes I would be taking them in are Spanish 2, Spanish 3, and Phy Sci 5, all of them are GEs that I need to take in order to graduate. None of them are relevant to my major or minor (which is History and Urban Planning)
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Re: What's the maximum P/NP (Pass/No Pass) one can have?
If you are so skeptical why don't you search TLS and find anecdotal evidence that says having a few pass/fail grades will doom your application
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