My GPA & LSAT ADDENDUM CONSTRUSTIVE CRITICISM PLS
Posted: Thu Mar 13, 2014 6:25 am
First, would it be ok to include my GPA AND LSAT together for my addendum?
If I had to describe my first two years in undergrad in two words I would have to say emotional and unstable. My first two semesters I worked a total of 40 hours between my full time job and work study in order to pay for tuition. The commute back and forth to my job and school was an hour and half by public transportation and that made it increasingly difficult for me to manage my study time. To make matters worse my mother had to get a blood transfusion so I flew back to Arizona. Ready to put school on the back burner, my mother scolded me and said that was not an option. To ease my mind she texted me every morning and in between classes just to make sure I was ok. Isn’t that ironic? At the end of my freshman year I made the decision to resign from my full time job and take out a private loan to pay for the rest of my tuition in order to raise that 2.3 GPA.
Although I had to move three times my sophomore year I was awarded a work study position held in the same building as my major core classes so I could have easier access to computer labs and other resources to help me study. Diligence, hard work and better time management allowed me to bring my GPA from a 2.3 to a 2.6 the end of my sophomore year. My last two years of undergrad I was able to bring my GPA up from a 2.6 to a 2.89.
I had no idea what I was up against when I initially took the LSAT. The last year of my undergrad I struggled financially to pay my bills because I was unemployed and could no longer be awarded work study. Either pay my rent or pay for the LSAT course. I decided I would study on my own and take the test. Unsatisfied with my score I knew I had to find a way to pay for an LSAT course. I took a year off before applying to law school to gain more work experience. Unfortunately, after five months of working at Pierce & Associates I was laid off and unemployed for nine months. I returned to Arizona and after 3 months of rigorously applying for jobs I was offered a position at a financial services company. With my very first check I paid for a weekend LSAT course. Taking that course allowed me to score 10 points higher than my first LSAT score.
If I had to describe my first two years in undergrad in two words I would have to say emotional and unstable. My first two semesters I worked a total of 40 hours between my full time job and work study in order to pay for tuition. The commute back and forth to my job and school was an hour and half by public transportation and that made it increasingly difficult for me to manage my study time. To make matters worse my mother had to get a blood transfusion so I flew back to Arizona. Ready to put school on the back burner, my mother scolded me and said that was not an option. To ease my mind she texted me every morning and in between classes just to make sure I was ok. Isn’t that ironic? At the end of my freshman year I made the decision to resign from my full time job and take out a private loan to pay for the rest of my tuition in order to raise that 2.3 GPA.
Although I had to move three times my sophomore year I was awarded a work study position held in the same building as my major core classes so I could have easier access to computer labs and other resources to help me study. Diligence, hard work and better time management allowed me to bring my GPA from a 2.3 to a 2.6 the end of my sophomore year. My last two years of undergrad I was able to bring my GPA up from a 2.6 to a 2.89.
I had no idea what I was up against when I initially took the LSAT. The last year of my undergrad I struggled financially to pay my bills because I was unemployed and could no longer be awarded work study. Either pay my rent or pay for the LSAT course. I decided I would study on my own and take the test. Unsatisfied with my score I knew I had to find a way to pay for an LSAT course. I took a year off before applying to law school to gain more work experience. Unfortunately, after five months of working at Pierce & Associates I was laid off and unemployed for nine months. I returned to Arizona and after 3 months of rigorously applying for jobs I was offered a position at a financial services company. With my very first check I paid for a weekend LSAT course. Taking that course allowed me to score 10 points higher than my first LSAT score.