Seconded. I bought all the required books and recommended supplements for around $700 new from AMZ.Eugenie Danglars wrote:All new casebooks this term cost me $652. With a few used supplements that I've bought/will buyt $709 is on the money. Note this is all new stuff from amazon. New from the bookstore will be rather more (8-900, I'd guess), and used from online will be much less depending on how low you go on quality. hth.rinkrat19 wrote:Is the school's estimate of $709 per semester for books pretty accurate? Is that if you buy new (implying that renting and/or buying used books would bring the total down)?
Northwestern 1L/2L/3L/Grads Taking Questions and Challenges Forum
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
- Flips88
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
different perspective here. I buy used. For the most part it's not an issue. I don't mind another's highlighting and underlining. (However, the person that had my Con Law book highlighted and underlined way toooo much stuff). But this semester I bought books for 4 classes used when I could, new when I couldn't and it was about $430. With supplements that I eventually buy, it'll probably be $550.rinkrat19 wrote:Is the school's estimate of $709 per semester for books pretty accurate? Is that if you buy new (implying that renting and/or buying used books would bring the total down)?
- homestyle28
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Holy crap, you're not kidding!Eugenie Danglars wrote:Grades are out for 1L's, just fyi.
- Dany
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Y'all buy all new books? 

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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
I don't like marks in my book. And used books at the school bookstore (where I could pick out the ones that are unmarked) are around the same price that you can find them new on the internet.Dany wrote:Y'all buy all new books?
Is it the most economical decision? No, but I'm up to my eyeballs in debt anyways.

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- Eugenie Danglars
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
I buy used if I can find ones with no markings. Can't deal with other people's markings.Dany wrote:Y'all buy all new books?
I wouldn't do that to you.homestyle28 wrote:Holy crap, you're not kidding!Eugenie Danglars wrote:Grades are out for 1L's, just fyi.
- rinkrat19
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Thanks, everyone.
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Do any 2Ls know of a rough guide of translating GPA to percentile?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
From another NU thread:splitmuch wrote:Do any 2Ls know of a rough guide of translating GPA to percentile?
rayiner wrote:3.8 - top 10%eliekedourie wrote:Can anyone clue me in on what GPA is top 10%, 25% and the like. I know they don't post class rank, but I'm just trying to get a sense of where I fall. Thanks.
3.65 - top 25%
3.5 - top 35%
3.35 - top 50%
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Thanksbdubs wrote:From another NU thread:splitmuch wrote:Do any 2Ls know of a rough guide of translating GPA to percentile?rayiner wrote:3.8 - top 10%eliekedourie wrote:Can anyone clue me in on what GPA is top 10%, 25% and the like. I know they don't post class rank, but I'm just trying to get a sense of where I fall. Thanks.
3.65 - top 25%
3.5 - top 35%
3.35 - top 50%
- Flips88
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
I'm used book man myself. Don't care how slutty the book has been in its past. It can still teach me.Dany wrote:Y'all buy all new books?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
One more perspective on books. If you really want to keep your book costs down and are okay with used books (as I am), it's possible to get used books for $50 through a student organization during the first week. Level of highlighting varies.
Another option along those lines is previous editions, which I used for two classes in the fall and am using for two this semester. I couldn't stomach paying $200 for one book (new edition, no used copies online or in the bookstore), and got a used copy the previous edition for less than $20 online. Maybe two cases that we covered in class weren't included, and I was able to either borrow a book for those days or find the case/brief online. All in all, I probably spent around $500 on books this year.
If your orientation follows the same schedule as ours, there'll be a panel with your first-semester professors that week, and it's worth asking the question then. Two of our doctrinal profs indicated that while they'd prefer the newest, the older edition would generally be fine, while another told us that we needed the newest version of the casebook, but that an older version of the secondary text would be just as good.
Another option along those lines is previous editions, which I used for two classes in the fall and am using for two this semester. I couldn't stomach paying $200 for one book (new edition, no used copies online or in the bookstore), and got a used copy the previous edition for less than $20 online. Maybe two cases that we covered in class weren't included, and I was able to either borrow a book for those days or find the case/brief online. All in all, I probably spent around $500 on books this year.
If your orientation follows the same schedule as ours, there'll be a panel with your first-semester professors that week, and it's worth asking the question then. Two of our doctrinal profs indicated that while they'd prefer the newest, the older edition would generally be fine, while another told us that we needed the newest version of the casebook, but that an older version of the secondary text would be just as good.
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Ahem. Rude.Holly Golightly wrote:That's what I would have gone with.bk187 wrote:
We are quite cliquey. I was expecting a jab more along the lines of, "I didn't know this year's 1L's actually drank."
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
People always talk about 2 years of WE, a 3+ GPA and a 172-3+ are a lock for Northwestern, what exactly qualifies as work experience though? Are people generally referencing corporate, white collar jobs or will any, obviously excluding things like flipping burgers, job that distances you from your undergrad graduation suffice?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
With the right GPA and LSAT flipping burgers is just fine.
- rinkrat19
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
They seem to not really care, as long as you were living like a grownup. (i.e. supporting yourself with your burger-flipping money, rather than just flipping burgers to buy xbox games while living in your parents' basement.)freaknroll wrote:People always talk about 2 years of WE, a 3+ GPA and a 172-3+ are a lock for Northwestern, what exactly qualifies as work experience though? Are people generally referencing corporate, white collar jobs or will any, obviously excluding things like flipping burgers, job that distances you from your undergrad graduation suffice?
- IAFG
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
They don't really care about that either. In DVZ's dream world, every law student would have been a former management consultant/i-banker with a shot at Kellogg, but in practice they admit burger-flippers with 17X LSATs often enough.rinkrat19 wrote:They seem to not really care, as long as you were living like a grownup. (i.e. supporting yourself with your burger-flipping money, rather than just flipping burgers to buy xbox games while living in your parents' basement.)freaknroll wrote:People always talk about 2 years of WE, a 3+ GPA and a 172-3+ are a lock for Northwestern, what exactly qualifies as work experience though? Are people generally referencing corporate, white collar jobs or will any, obviously excluding things like flipping burgers, job that distances you from your undergrad graduation suffice?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
The OCI callback sheet is a total nightmare. How is it possible that so many of these firms have such high GPA medians? Do they all call back the same 20-30 candidates?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Kinda. Firms don't yield protect, at least not if you can fake interest even a little. So people with 3.75ish plus get callbacks at many firms. But they only take one job. Half the people they callback are below that number. And I'd guess the people who take the offer are in large part in the below median part.bdubs wrote:The OCI callback sheet is a total nightmare. How is it possible that so many of these firms have such high GPA medians? Do they all call back the same 20-30 candidates?
The average person is probably getting 1-3 callbacks. The top ten percent of the class gets more like 10+.
Also a lot of these firms are only calling back a few people. If a firm calls back 3.85 3.9 3.95 3.4 3.3 their median goes down as 3.85. You aren't necessarily getting a good sample.
I'd subtract .2 from the median of these firms to have a better idea. But the lowest GPA field is probably fairly accurate.
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Hello soon-to-be fellow NU attendees! I am excited to be at Northwestern next fall and I am 99% sure I'm willing to pay sticker. (I'm a big splitter, 3.09/175.) However, $200k+ is a lot of money and getting some scholarship/grant money would be quite welcome. I going to try for merit money, but don't expect any.
Does anyone know what I can expect from need-based financial aid? I'm married, so I'm independent (not that my parents have money to throw around anyway) but that also means my household income is decent. I will have about $20k of educational debt coming in and a significant amount of savings and other assets. Will I get anything? Should I be bracing myself for sticker?
Does anyone know what I can expect from need-based financial aid? I'm married, so I'm independent (not that my parents have money to throw around anyway) but that also means my household income is decent. I will have about $20k of educational debt coming in and a significant amount of savings and other assets. Will I get anything? Should I be bracing myself for sticker?
- D-hops
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
You should brace yourself for sticker. Northwestern combines their need and merit based aid into one aid package, but it is pretty much just merit based. I don't know of any splitters with numbers like yours that got any money. Congrats on NU, though!Samara wrote:Hello soon-to-be fellow NU attendees! I am excited to be at Northwestern next fall and I am 99% sure I'm willing to pay sticker. (I'm a big splitter, 3.09/175.) However, $200k+ is a lot of money and getting some scholarship/grant money would be quite welcome. I going to try for merit money, but don't expect any.
Does anyone know what I can expect from need-based financial aid? I'm married, so I'm independent (not that my parents have money to throw around anyway) but that also means my household income is decent. I will have about $20k of educational debt coming in and a significant amount of savings and other assets. Will I get anything? Should I be bracing myself for sticker?
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- Flips88
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
This may be a completely retarded question, but do they reevaluate aid after 1L or does the "we're out of money" line they gave me when I was admitted hold true for my entire time here?
- D-hops
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
They threw money at people that successfully got accepted at higher schools in the T14 as transfers and they were not insignificant amounts. So, if you have the grades to do it, I would recommend at least applying to transfer to HYSCCN and leverage that to some (or more) money.Flips88 wrote:This may be a completely retarded question, but do they reevaluate aid after 1L or does the "we're out of money" line they gave me when I was admitted hold true for my entire time here?
This is the part where I whine that I didn't do this and really wished I had (that and retake the LSAT). C'est la vie.
- Samara
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Thanks! I'm really happy to be attending because it seems like a perfect fit for me. (That, and it may be my only T14 acceptance.) I'm not risk-averse, but it's still a bit scary to take on that much debt. Will I at least get offered the full COA in loans? I'd like to not live like a broke college student again and housing in the city is expensive.D-hops wrote:You should brace yourself for sticker. Northwestern combines their need and merit based aid into one aid package, but it is pretty much just merit based. I don't know of any splitters with numbers like yours that got any money. Congrats on NU, though!Samara wrote:Hello soon-to-be fellow NU attendees! I am excited to be at Northwestern next fall and I am 99% sure I'm willing to pay sticker. (I'm a big splitter, 3.09/175.) However, $200k+ is a lot of money and getting some scholarship/grant money would be quite welcome. I going to try for merit money, but don't expect any.
Does anyone know what I can expect from need-based financial aid? I'm married, so I'm independent (not that my parents have money to throw around anyway) but that also means my household income is decent. I will have about $20k of educational debt coming in and a significant amount of savings and other assets. Will I get anything? Should I be bracing myself for sticker?
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Re: Northwestern Students Taking Questions and Challenges
Yea, unless you have credit issues, you get the full amount. Be prepared to dip into savings if you want to live downtown. It's nearly impossible to afford the rent unless you live like a poor college student.Samara wrote:Thanks! I'm really happy to be attending because it seems like a perfect fit for me. (That, and it may be my only T14 acceptance.) I'm not risk-averse, but it's still a bit scary to take on that much debt. Will I at least get offered the full COA in loans? I'd like to not live like a broke college student again and housing in the city is expensive.D-hops wrote:You should brace yourself for sticker. Northwestern combines their need and merit based aid into one aid package, but it is pretty much just merit based. I don't know of any splitters with numbers like yours that got any money. Congrats on NU, though!Samara wrote:Hello soon-to-be fellow NU attendees! I am excited to be at Northwestern next fall and I am 99% sure I'm willing to pay sticker. (I'm a big splitter, 3.09/175.) However, $200k+ is a lot of money and getting some scholarship/grant money would be quite welcome. I going to try for merit money, but don't expect any.
Does anyone know what I can expect from need-based financial aid? I'm married, so I'm independent (not that my parents have money to throw around anyway) but that also means my household income is decent. I will have about $20k of educational debt coming in and a significant amount of savings and other assets. Will I get anything? Should I be bracing myself for sticker?
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