Georgetown Transfer Class of 2016
Posted: Sat Apr 12, 2014 12:51 am
Starting a new thread for admitted transfer students to discuss academic/administrative/housing matters.
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=227802
Silly question, but how do I do this?CounselorNebby wrote:Sounds great. Also, if you happen to be the anonymous poster that created the previous transfer thread, can you change the title of the previous thread by replacing "GULC" with "Georgetown" so folks searching Google for "Georgetown law transfer" will find the thread. If not that's fine, but no one outside of TLS or "in-the-know" knows that GULC is shorthand for Georgetown. If only so folks in the future can better access our heaps of anecdotal experience during this Early Action cycle. Much love. Look forward to meeting y'all in the Fall.
Click the "Edit" button on the first post. Whereas you'll see the "Message body" that has what you typed. You'll notice that above that, and above the formatting options, lists the Subject line. It is able to be edited. Thus, changing the subject of the first post changes the entire thread's title.doctoroflaw91 wrote:Silly question, but how do I do this?CounselorNebby wrote:Sounds great. Also, if you happen to be the anonymous poster that created the previous transfer thread, can you change the title of the previous thread by replacing "GULC" with "Georgetown" so folks searching Google for "Georgetown law transfer" will find the thread. If not that's fine, but no one outside of TLS or "in-the-know" knows that GULC is shorthand for Georgetown. If only so folks in the future can better access our heaps of anecdotal experience during this Early Action cycle. Much love. Look forward to meeting y'all in the Fall.
Unless I'm completely mistaken, I don't think that you are ever necessarily "bound," as if it was UChicago where they have an early action policy. But yes, you are correct in saying that you would certainly lose the deposit money.Itwasluck wrote:This may be an even sillier question, but when does a deposit become binding? If we pay the two installments, does that commit us to attending GULC in the fall? I may throw a couple applications at a few top 6 schools, and I was just curious what sort of time line we are looking at. I assume that the deposits will be lost (they say non-refundable), but I am more concerned about when we are bound. Thanks guys!
That was my thinking as well. Thanks for the feedback.doctoroflaw91 wrote:Unless I'm completely mistaken, I don't think that you are ever necessarily "bound," as if it was UChicago where they have an early action policy. But yes, you are correct in saying that you would certainly lose the deposit money.Itwasluck wrote:This may be an even sillier question, but when does a deposit become binding? If we pay the two installments, does that commit us to attending GULC in the fall? I may throw a couple applications at a few top 6 schools, and I was just curious what sort of time line we are looking at. I assume that the deposits will be lost (they say non-refundable), but I am more concerned about when we are bound. Thanks guys!
I believe that there is also campus housing, but I'm not quite sure how available that is to transfer students.chinstrap wrote:Any ideas on housing? I've got some friends a few stops up on the Red line in the NOMA/Gallaudet area which is about a mile and a half away and pretty cheap for DC.
Are GULC students pretty spread out, or do the vast majority live by campus?
Depends on how hard you try during the summer journal placement process. There is detailed information concerning the process on GULC website. Below is a mathmatical formula I created to show you the odds:doctoroflaw91 wrote:Does anyone know how likely it is that transfers will be placed onto a journal?
Haha, thanks. I plan on taking 2 days off after finals finish and then hitting the ground running with write-on.CounselorNebby wrote:Depends on how hard you try during the summer journal placement process. There is detailed information concerning the process on GULC website. Below is a mathmatical formula I created to show you the odds:doctoroflaw91 wrote:Does anyone know how likely it is that transfers will be placed onto a journal?
Try Hard = Possibly succeed
Don't try hard = Surely fail
The "Main Journal" of my current law school weighs GPA much much more than the write-on. I figure that transfers have no GPA for journals to consider. If GULC's main journal uses the same formula, I am afraid that it is almost impossible for transfers to get into the main journal...definitely a reason to stay.UnfrozenCaveman wrote:It's hard for a transfer to get on main journal, but not so much the secondary ones so long as you do a decent job on the write on and aren't really picky about the other journals.
weiweilt wrote:The "Main Journal" of my current law school weighs GPA much much more than the write-on. I figure that transfers have no GPA for journals to consider. If GULC's main journal uses the same formula, I am afraid that it is almost impossible for transfers to get into the main journal...definitely a reason to stay.UnfrozenCaveman wrote:It's hard for a transfer to get on main journal, but not so much the secondary ones so long as you do a decent job on the write on and aren't really picky about the other journals.
I've heard that GULC's clinics is really great.doctoroflaw91 wrote:
Not that concerned about a journal; it's just something that I would like to do. More focused on getting into things like clinics and moot court, as I want to do family law, which is litigation-heavy.
Actually one of the main reasons that I transferred, apart from the notoriety and such. I think there's far more value in splitting education time between the classroom and hands-on experience, as opposed to solely relegating students to the classroom.weiweilt wrote:I've heard that GULC's clinics is really great.doctoroflaw91 wrote:
Not that concerned about a journal; it's just something that I would like to do. More focused on getting into things like clinics and moot court, as I want to do family law, which is litigation-heavy.
This is patently false for GULC. Around 5 transfers wrote onto GLJ.weiweilt wrote:The "Main Journal" of my current law school weighs GPA much much more than the write-on. I figure that transfers have no GPA for journals to consider. If GULC's main journal uses the same formula, I am afraid that it is almost impossible for transfers to get into the main journal...definitely a reason to stay.UnfrozenCaveman wrote:It's hard for a transfer to get on main journal, but not so much the secondary ones so long as you do a decent job on the write on and aren't really picky about the other journals.
pinkpather wrote: This is patently false for GULC. Around 5 transfers wrote onto GLJ.
CounselorNebby wrote:pinkpather wrote: This is patently false for GULC. Around 5 transfers wrote onto GLJ.