Academic Letters of Recommendation-Veteran
Posted: Tue Sep 20, 2016 1:57 am
UGPA: 3.85/ LSAC: 3.83 (one retake of a course, 1 credit hour, I had a "C" and an "A".) Normal state school, Economics Major
LSAT: Not taken. Should hit 165, hopefully 170 (hopefully)
I apologize if this has been addressed before and my question is a bit premature as I have not taken the LSAT- intend to take in February 2017. My diagnostic was a 159 and I will be able to study a good deal from Thanksgiving to the February test (that is all I will be doing over the three weeks of block leave and will dedicate all my weekends to this). I am currently on active duty and will be applying in the Fall 2017 admissions cycle. I am trying to anticipate potential shortcomings in my application and address those as early as possible. I am pretty confident that I can count on a strong letter of recommendation from my CO, but I have no contact with any of my professors from undergrad and it is likely that my face and name have been completely forgotten by all of them. I am sure I am not alone in this regard and am seeking advice from anyone who has dealt with this situation before specifically veterans.
1. If I had a strong letter of recommendation from my CO, but a general letter from a college professor, how much does this hurt admittance chances assuming my UGPA and LSAT are hitting a school's medians with specific emphasis on T10 schools.
2. How would you guy's recommend that I tackle letters of recommendation ? I could also get a strong letter of recommendation from a practicing attorney that volunteered his time coaching mock trial at my undergrad, but I don't know if this serves as a good replacement for a letter of recommendation from a professor. Lastly, I could start reaching out to my old professors when I get back to the states, but I live in a different state and really I would only be able to update them on what I am doing since I graduated or provide them documentation that I did well in their class (not that personal relationship that cites specific examples.)
Thanks and any advice is appreciated.
LSAT: Not taken. Should hit 165, hopefully 170 (hopefully)
I apologize if this has been addressed before and my question is a bit premature as I have not taken the LSAT- intend to take in February 2017. My diagnostic was a 159 and I will be able to study a good deal from Thanksgiving to the February test (that is all I will be doing over the three weeks of block leave and will dedicate all my weekends to this). I am currently on active duty and will be applying in the Fall 2017 admissions cycle. I am trying to anticipate potential shortcomings in my application and address those as early as possible. I am pretty confident that I can count on a strong letter of recommendation from my CO, but I have no contact with any of my professors from undergrad and it is likely that my face and name have been completely forgotten by all of them. I am sure I am not alone in this regard and am seeking advice from anyone who has dealt with this situation before specifically veterans.
1. If I had a strong letter of recommendation from my CO, but a general letter from a college professor, how much does this hurt admittance chances assuming my UGPA and LSAT are hitting a school's medians with specific emphasis on T10 schools.
2. How would you guy's recommend that I tackle letters of recommendation ? I could also get a strong letter of recommendation from a practicing attorney that volunteered his time coaching mock trial at my undergrad, but I don't know if this serves as a good replacement for a letter of recommendation from a professor. Lastly, I could start reaching out to my old professors when I get back to the states, but I live in a different state and really I would only be able to update them on what I am doing since I graduated or provide them documentation that I did well in their class (not that personal relationship that cites specific examples.)
Thanks and any advice is appreciated.