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Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 4:00 am
by ShenmueRemake
I'm an LSAT tutor and have a student who goes to a for-profit Christian school called Grand Canyon University. She has her heart set on an Ivy League school. Do people from such schools get admitted to credible law schools? I'd better tell her now so she can make the decision if its even worth studying for the LSAT.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 5:04 am
by raven1231
Certainly. As long as she has a good GPA for them to showcase.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 9:27 am
by ponderingmeerkat
If she can drop a solid LSAT on top of a decent GPA, I'm pretty there's not a law school in the country that will care.

My only concern would be making sure her university is accredited. Some of those really fringe-y religious universities aren't and I could see THAT being a no-go. Since I'm unfamiliar with this particular school of hers, that's probably worth looking into. But, assuming it is, have her keep that GPA up and study for the LSAT and anything is possible.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 10:57 am
by LawTweet
My hunch is that she'll be fine. Grand Canyon is in the process of trying to go non-profit and is actually a residential college too. It's one of the slightly more legit for-profit schools in my experience.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 11:11 am
by grand inquisitor
wait are they really remaking shenmue?

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 11:14 am
by cavalier1138
Yeah, I'd be much more worried about the "for-profit" part than the Christian part.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 11:18 am
by KissMyAxe
Post Deleted

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Thu Jul 28, 2016 12:03 pm
by ponderingmeerkat
KissMyAxe wrote:
ponderingmeerkat wrote:If she can drop a solid LSAT on top of a decent GPA, I'm pretty there's not a law school in the country that will care.

My only concern would be making sure her university is accredited. Some of those really fringe-y religious universities aren't and I could see THAT being a no-go. Since I'm unfamiliar with this particular school of hers, that's probably worth looking into. But, assuming it is, have her keep that GPA up and study for the LSAT and anything is possible.
You'd think, wouldn't you? However, I grew up near a very extremist Southern Baptist unaccredited college, and they've had two grads the past 10 years or so go to YLS. I don't think school matters at all, other than a handful maybe giving a small boost.
Interesting. I have a family acquaintance who was homeschooled all the way through highschool-level, went to Pensacola Christian College (an unaccredited Southern Baptist Madrassa) and was bitching about how she couldn't get a job that required a highschool diploma without getting her GED first. I found that story hilarious.

Would be ironic if she could apply to Yale Law School with her "4.0 GPA" in Bible General Studies and skip the GED process.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 3:39 pm
by jbagelboy
it rarely ever happens, but its not possible.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 3:49 pm
by Nebby
ShenmueRemake wrote:I'm an LSAT tutor and have a student who goes to a for-profit Christian school called Grand Canyon University. She has her heart set on an Ivy League school. Do people from such schools get admitted to credible law schools? I'd better tell her now so she can make the decision if its even worth studying for the LSAT.
Isn't that school online only?

Anyway, so long as it's accredited, she has a gpa above 3.5 and a 170+ LSAT, then she can probably get until a couple Ivies

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 4:00 pm
by 20170322
KissMyAxe wrote:
ponderingmeerkat wrote:If she can drop a solid LSAT on top of a decent GPA, I'm pretty there's not a law school in the country that will care.

My only concern would be making sure her university is accredited. Some of those really fringe-y religious universities aren't and I could see THAT being a no-go. Since I'm unfamiliar with this particular school of hers, that's probably worth looking into. But, assuming it is, have her keep that GPA up and study for the LSAT and anything is possible.
You'd think, wouldn't you? However, I grew up near a very extremist Southern Baptist unaccredited college, and they've had two grads the past 10 years or so go to YLS. I don't think school matters at all, other than a handful maybe giving a small boost.

Is it Bob Jones University?

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 4:49 pm
by cdotson2
Stop spreading the term Ivy League law school. If you are talking about the specific Ivy League schools that have law schools for a specific reason(like applying to the same school you went to for undergrad) that is one thing, but using it as a vague term to mean good law schools is misleading and misinformed.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 5:01 pm
by A. Nony Mouse
Nebby wrote:
ShenmueRemake wrote:I'm an LSAT tutor and have a student who goes to a for-profit Christian school called Grand Canyon University. She has her heart set on an Ivy League school. Do people from such schools get admitted to credible law schools? I'd better tell her now so she can make the decision if its even worth studying for the LSAT.
Isn't that school online only?

Anyway, so long as it's accredited, she has a gpa above 3.5 and a 170+ LSAT, then she can probably get until a couple Ivies
Nah, it's residential. Western Governors' University is online only.

Re: Christian College to Ivy League Law School?

Posted: Sun Jul 31, 2016 5:04 pm
by Dcc617
Don't most T14 release lists of where their entering class went to undergrad? I feel like that could definitively answer the question. See if T14 schools have students from peer schools.