Loyola LA Students who have transferred out Forum
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Anonymous posting is only available to the creator of each thread. The anonymous posting feature is intended to permit the solicitation of anonymous advice regarding the transfer application process, chances of being accepted, etc. Unacceptable uses include: testing the feature, questions which are clearly fake or hypothetical in nature, harassing other users, etc. Posters should also read and understand the announcements posted at the top of the Transfers forum prior to using the anonymous feature.
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Anonymous Posting
Anonymous posting is only available to the creator of each thread. The anonymous posting feature is intended to permit the solicitation of anonymous advice regarding the transfer application process, chances of being accepted, etc. Unacceptable uses include: testing the feature, questions which are clearly fake or hypothetical in nature, harassing other users, etc. Posters should also read and understand the announcements posted at the top of the Transfers forum prior to using the anonymous feature.
Failure to follow these rules will get you outed, warned, or banned.
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Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
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Last edited by Bilka on Mon Sep 07, 2015 1:01 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Why would Loyola let a student transferring out participate in OCI? If you're transferring, you should be participating in OCI at your new school.
I didn't go to Loyola but the best advice I can give you is NOT to go to a law school with the intention of transferring. Because the top 10% is literally the top 10%.(I know, stating the obvious) And there's no guarantee you'll do that well.(in fact, it's about as far from a guarantee as possible)
I didn't go to Loyola but the best advice I can give you is NOT to go to a law school with the intention of transferring. Because the top 10% is literally the top 10%.(I know, stating the obvious) And there's no guarantee you'll do that well.(in fact, it's about as far from a guarantee as possible)
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
lawman84 wrote:Why would Loyola let a student transferring out participate in OCI? If you're transferring, you should be participating in OCI at your new school.
I didn't go to Loyola but the best advice I can give you is NOT to go to a law school with the intention of transferring. Because the top 10% is literally the top 10%.(I know, stating the obvious) And there's no guarantee you'll do that well.(in fact, it's about as far from a guarantee as possible)
Yes ... I understand that the ability to transfer is not set in stone.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Well, then I wish you the best of luck.Bilka wrote:lawman84 wrote:Why would Loyola let a student transferring out participate in OCI? If you're transferring, you should be participating in OCI at your new school.
I didn't go to Loyola but the best advice I can give you is NOT to go to a law school with the intention of transferring. Because the top 10% is literally the top 10%.(I know, stating the obvious) And there's no guarantee you'll do that well.(in fact, it's about as far from a guarantee as possible)
Yes ... I understand that the ability to transfer is not set in stone.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
I SAID GOOD DAY, SIR!lawman84 wrote:Well, then I wish you the best of luck.Bilka wrote:lawman84 wrote:Why would Loyola let a student transferring out participate in OCI? If you're transferring, you should be participating in OCI at your new school.
I didn't go to Loyola but the best advice I can give you is NOT to go to a law school with the intention of transferring. Because the top 10% is literally the top 10%.(I know, stating the obvious) And there's no guarantee you'll do that well.(in fact, it's about as far from a guarantee as possible)
Yes ... I understand that the ability to transfer is not set in stone.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Honestly, I'm not so sure it's that out there of an idea to go to a law school with the intent of transferring out if you have legitimate reasons to believe it's possible. That's what I did. My LSAT, etc. were well above the school's median and I completely busted my butt and ended up at the top, which I ultimately knew I could do. I chose my 1L school based on convenience (where I was living before LS) and money given that I didn't get in to my target school, despite having options in between. And, now, I've been accepted as a transfer at my target school.
However, if you have a median LSAT, etc., I think it's naive. Also, I had to completely bust my butt as I said, and my target school is/was very transfer-friendly.
However, if you have a median LSAT, etc., I think it's naive. Also, I had to completely bust my butt as I said, and my target school is/was very transfer-friendly.
Last edited by randomguy89 on Thu Jul 02, 2015 7:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Just because some people win the lottery doesn't make relying on winning the lottery anything other than a terrible financial plan.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
I'm not so sure. My LSAT was in the 160s and median at my school is low to mid 150s. Also, my undergraduate GPA hurt me - it was low in large part because I just didn't care at first and simply grew up and started taking school seriously. I did nearly perfectly towards the end but was hammered by earlier grades bad enough for academic probation.A. Nony Mouse wrote:Just because some people win the lottery doesn't make relying on winning the lottery anything other than a terrible financial plan.
My point is simply that, while there's no direct correlation, there is some correlation between your numbers and your LS performance if you're willing to put in the work.
I should also point out that graduating from the school I chose was not some nightmare scenario for me and, in fact, I'm considering staying despite achieving my goal. I also don't want big law.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Again, I don't think because it worked for you, it's necessarily something anyone can plan on. Plenty of people who make it high enough up in the class to transfer had GPAs/LSATs that were normal for that school; plenty of splitters don't end up in the top of their class. And everyone thinks they're willing to put in the work.randomguy89 wrote:I'm not so sure. My LSAT was in the 160s and median at my school is low to mid 150s. Also, my undergraduate GPA hurt me - it was low in large part because I just didn't care at first and simply grew up and started taking school seriously. I did nearly perfectly towards the end but was hammered by earlier grades bad enough for academic probation.A. Nony Mouse wrote:Just because some people win the lottery doesn't make relying on winning the lottery anything other than a terrible financial plan.
My point is simply that, while there's no direct correlation, there is some correlation between your numbers and your LS performance if you're willing to put in the work.
I should also point out that graduating from the school I chose was not some nightmare scenario for me and, in fact, I'm considering staying despite achieving my goal. I also don't want big law.
But I agree that there's no harm in trying, as long as you're happy graduating from the school you matriculate at. I just think for lots of people, going in "planning" to transfer means they wouldn't be happy doing that.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
as someone who picked a school with a moderate intent to transfer in the back of my mind, i have some advice--
1. do not do this unless you are 100% happy graduating from your 1L school
2. do not do this if it's a stupid financial decision (e.g. you're not on a full-ride and/or you are debt-financing living expenses and tuition)
3. do not think your above-75th LSAT score means you have any sort of advantage when it comes to taking a law school exam. law school is an ego killer. many, if not most, of your classmates will be acutely aware of the employment situation and will be busting their ass just as much as you will be
4. make sure you realize exactly how much you are gambling, and make sure you know how well your 1L school places students into your desired area
and finally,

1. do not do this unless you are 100% happy graduating from your 1L school
2. do not do this if it's a stupid financial decision (e.g. you're not on a full-ride and/or you are debt-financing living expenses and tuition)
3. do not think your above-75th LSAT score means you have any sort of advantage when it comes to taking a law school exam. law school is an ego killer. many, if not most, of your classmates will be acutely aware of the employment situation and will be busting their ass just as much as you will be
4. make sure you realize exactly how much you are gambling, and make sure you know how well your 1L school places students into your desired area
and finally,

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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
I should point out I was not 100% happy graduating from my 1L school when I chose it, but it grew on me. I didn't view staying as a dire scenario, but I was getting out no matter what. I did have, essentially, both a full ride and no living expenses.PourMeTea wrote:as someone who picked a school with a moderate intent to transfer in the back of my mind, i have some advice--
1. do not do this unless you are 100% happy graduating from your 1L school
2. do not do this if it's a stupid financial decision (e.g. you're not on a full-ride and/or you are debt-financing living expenses and tuition)
3. do not think your above-75th LSAT score means you have any sort of advantage when it comes to taking a law school exam. law school is an ego killer. many, if not most, of your classmates will be acutely aware of the employment situation and will be busting their ass just as much as you will be
As to #3, I respectfully disagree. Obviously this will vary depending on exactly how high/low your 1L school is ranked, but I was consistently amazed by the incompetence of a large number of my peers. And, while some had far too active social lives and the like, many worked very hard and just couldn't hack it.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
Problem is that you have no idea how many of your incompetent peers scored similarly to you or even higher on the LSAT.randomguy89 wrote:I should point out I was not 100% happy graduating from my 1L school when I chose it, but it grew on me. I didn't view staying as a dire scenario, but I was getting out no matter what. I did have, essentially, both a full ride and no living expenses.PourMeTea wrote:as someone who picked a school with a moderate intent to transfer in the back of my mind, i have some advice--
1. do not do this unless you are 100% happy graduating from your 1L school
2. do not do this if it's a stupid financial decision (e.g. you're not on a full-ride and/or you are debt-financing living expenses and tuition)
3. do not think your above-75th LSAT score means you have any sort of advantage when it comes to taking a law school exam. law school is an ego killer. many, if not most, of your classmates will be acutely aware of the employment situation and will be busting their ass just as much as you will be
As to #3, I respectfully disagree. Obviously this will vary depending on exactly how high/low your 1L school is ranked, but I was consistently amazed by the incompetence of a large number of my peers. And, while some had far too active social lives and the like, many worked very hard and just couldn't hack it.
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
going to agree with lawman here and also mention that your anecdotal and highly personalized evidence is not useful to OP
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Re: Loyola LA Students who have transferred out
I would also check the policies of the schools you would hope to transfer to (usc, ucla, etc) on transfer participation in OCI. I know individuals who were accepted into schools that don't allow transfers to participate so they wound up having no OCI.
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