Page 1 of 1

resolved

Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2017 2:22 am
by appind
.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2017 7:21 am
by twiix
I think writing "Why X" essays for every school you actually want to attend will seriously help your chances. Also, apply earlier. You should be seeing at least SOME acceptances in the T10. I won't speculate with H because I'm unfamiliar how they treat international GPA's and non-traditional applicants.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2017 7:22 am
by cavalier1138
You applied late. Unless your PS and LORs were extremely bad, I think that was probably what killed your apps.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Fri Sep 15, 2017 11:54 am
by Pozzo
As far as I understand, the GRE for H only comes into play if you have not taken the LSAT. Since you have an LSAT score, I don't think retaking the GRE would impact your chances.

I think your reapplication strategy should be to apply early and broadly, with an application that paints a compelling picture of why you're leaving behind a longer than average career (compared to the avg applicant) to go to law school.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2017 12:43 am
by appind
.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2017 8:07 am
by cavalier1138
Your last post highlighted a few issues:

1. You referred to your own PS as "compelling". I'm sure it was fine, but that stood out as a bit of a red flag that you may have a slightly inflated view of your application materials.

2. Mid-January is late. It's not too late, but it's late. And I'm betting that a lot of the people you heard about who didn't underperform their numbers that late in the game weren't international students.

3. You didn't mention that you'd taken the LSAT 5+ times. Normally, retakes aren't an issue, but if all five scores were reportable, I'd bet that had a lot to do with the waitlists.

4. As far as we know, Harvard is not considering the GRE if you have a reportable LSAT. And your LSAT isn't really that competitive for Harvard in the first place, so I wouldn't gauge your performance by their response.

5. Looking back at your initial post, it does sound like you were a bit too selective in your applications. Yes, you have a high LSAT, but it's just in the sweet spot for CCN. There's nothing to indicate that you're a strong enough candidate to be able to blow off applying to schools like Penn, Michigan, Berkeley, or Cornell, and not applying to those schools was a bad move. If NYU was the school in HYSCCN that you didn't apply to, that was an even worse move, and you shouldn't repeat that mistake again.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2017 12:54 pm
by appind
.

Re: How to proceed

Posted: Sat Sep 16, 2017 3:09 pm
by Delano
Late app can make a big difference. That was probably the biggest (possibly only) factor. (If you want to run the data on LSN to see if it's just selection bias, go ahead, but common knowledge is lateness, on its own, hurts apps quite a bit.)

You may want to get someone to read and give feedback on your PS, if you haven't.

Write a Why X for anywhere that's a serious option that's not HYSCCN. UVA without a Why X is basically a guaranteed WL/ding from my understanding. Also agree that you may have applied too narrowly.

Based on your numbers alone, your odds at H are not great, late app or no. Still worth an app though, because you never know.