Questions from an engineering grad applying to law school
Posted: Tue Jun 27, 2017 1:23 pm
Hello TLS community,
I am a long-time lurker and first-time poster, and I want to thank you for the frank (though at times extremely cynical) advice posted on this forum. I am in the process of preparing for admission in Fall 2018, and am currently studying hard for the September LSAT. I have some questions about my background and how to prepare the best application for my goals, and I would really appreciate any help.
My background is BS/MS engineering degrees from a Top-15 USNWR university. My undergrad GPA was 3.50, master GPA 3.38 (bad grade in a research course) and I completed both degrees in 4 years. I also took 4 additional upper-undergrad courses after graduation for fun (two of them were literature/writing courses - any area I have had a lifelong interest in) and got all A's, but I understand these won't count for LSAC GPA purposes. I am a few years out of school and my WE includes some corporate internships, some full-time tech transfer work, and some entrepreneurial stock investment research work.
My goal is to practice law in Chicago, and from some informational conversations I've had it seems like I would most like litigation work. It seems like IP litigation may be the path of least resistance to getting a job with my background. I also like to argue with my mom if that is a good indication of liking litigation?
So here are my questions:
1. Who should I ask to write my recommendations? One literature professor (very good relationship) from a post-undergrad course, and one science/engineering professor (graduated a few years ago so they won't remember me)? Maybe one work colleague who is a medical doctor and mentor to my entrepreneurial work (outstanding relationship)? I don't have strong relationships with work supervisors. What should these people comment on to help boost my candidacy?
2. I know this is might be a difficult question, but what LSAT score would I need to get significant money at the T14? I am studying very rigorously (full-time at the moment) for the upcoming September test, and I want to be sure I target the score I need. I know TLS hates hypothetical questions, but if I were to score a 176+, could I get a hefty scholarship at NU/UChicago, or have a shot at HLS with a great story?
3. Do you think adcoms would take into account the difficulty of my course of study and my statement of purpose (ie. not interested in being an engineer/scientist, but very interested in how the legal architecture can create a system of scientific innovation. I think my experience supports my claim strongly). I have seen people get flamed on this forum for asking if engineers get an unofficial GPA "bump" from adcoms, but I have the same question. I think the average undergrad engineering GPA in my school/major was a 3.3-3.4 (not sure), which I have seen to be the case in most engineering programs.
Thanks a bunch for reading my long post. I would really appreciate any thoughts/advice as I go through this process. If you had asked me what I wanted to be when I was in high school, I would have instantly replied "lawyer". Outside influences formed some of my decisions since then, and I wasn't really doing something I was passionate about. But I think I would enjoy a legal career because of the analytical thinking and argumentation involved, and the opportunity to do good as a lawyer (even though I fully understand the junior years are not glamorous at all).
Thank you for your help!
I am a long-time lurker and first-time poster, and I want to thank you for the frank (though at times extremely cynical) advice posted on this forum. I am in the process of preparing for admission in Fall 2018, and am currently studying hard for the September LSAT. I have some questions about my background and how to prepare the best application for my goals, and I would really appreciate any help.
My background is BS/MS engineering degrees from a Top-15 USNWR university. My undergrad GPA was 3.50, master GPA 3.38 (bad grade in a research course) and I completed both degrees in 4 years. I also took 4 additional upper-undergrad courses after graduation for fun (two of them were literature/writing courses - any area I have had a lifelong interest in) and got all A's, but I understand these won't count for LSAC GPA purposes. I am a few years out of school and my WE includes some corporate internships, some full-time tech transfer work, and some entrepreneurial stock investment research work.
My goal is to practice law in Chicago, and from some informational conversations I've had it seems like I would most like litigation work. It seems like IP litigation may be the path of least resistance to getting a job with my background. I also like to argue with my mom if that is a good indication of liking litigation?
So here are my questions:
1. Who should I ask to write my recommendations? One literature professor (very good relationship) from a post-undergrad course, and one science/engineering professor (graduated a few years ago so they won't remember me)? Maybe one work colleague who is a medical doctor and mentor to my entrepreneurial work (outstanding relationship)? I don't have strong relationships with work supervisors. What should these people comment on to help boost my candidacy?
2. I know this is might be a difficult question, but what LSAT score would I need to get significant money at the T14? I am studying very rigorously (full-time at the moment) for the upcoming September test, and I want to be sure I target the score I need. I know TLS hates hypothetical questions, but if I were to score a 176+, could I get a hefty scholarship at NU/UChicago, or have a shot at HLS with a great story?
3. Do you think adcoms would take into account the difficulty of my course of study and my statement of purpose (ie. not interested in being an engineer/scientist, but very interested in how the legal architecture can create a system of scientific innovation. I think my experience supports my claim strongly). I have seen people get flamed on this forum for asking if engineers get an unofficial GPA "bump" from adcoms, but I have the same question. I think the average undergrad engineering GPA in my school/major was a 3.3-3.4 (not sure), which I have seen to be the case in most engineering programs.
Thanks a bunch for reading my long post. I would really appreciate any thoughts/advice as I go through this process. If you had asked me what I wanted to be when I was in high school, I would have instantly replied "lawyer". Outside influences formed some of my decisions since then, and I wasn't really doing something I was passionate about. But I think I would enjoy a legal career because of the analytical thinking and argumentation involved, and the opportunity to do good as a lawyer (even though I fully understand the junior years are not glamorous at all).
Thank you for your help!