Just be careful...GrayGamut wrote:YASSS. Room for two? That's some Netflix swag.Phyr wrote:Just got a snuggie in the mail. It's so huge!

Just be careful...GrayGamut wrote:YASSS. Room for two? That's some Netflix swag.Phyr wrote:Just got a snuggie in the mail. It's so huge!
Haha okay I see you Jets. It'll probably just be my and my cat tho, and we're def on that level.jetsfan1 wrote: Just be careful...
Welcome and congratulations! A bit surreal, huh?lemondrop wrote:WOW I never thought I would say this but checking in!!!
Thank you so much, and congrats to you as well! Quite an honor to be in the company of awesome people such as yourselfGrayGamut wrote:Welcome and congratulations! A bit surreal, huh?lemondrop wrote:WOW I never thought I would say this but checking in!!!
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Congrats. I'm very happy for all of you.lemondrop wrote:WOW I never thought I would say this but checking in!!!
I actually had that up the first month, but only one or two people were in this thread then. I'll definitely put it up again right now. Also, I'd be happy to discuss it with you if you want to PM me.jetsfan1 wrote:Curious about what y'all are thinking about choosing between Y and other options. Could we maybe get a poll up at some point, one of those 100% attending, 90% sure, 50/50, etc. type things?
This decision ain't easy, and it's been helpful for me PMing others about it to hear their thoughts/force me to write my own out...
Thanks, that was very helpful. Do you think it would make a difference if i was granted a deferral (for a different reason) and THEN asked to be allowed to prolong my undergraduate career?KissMyAxe wrote:Not really, I guess the most relevant forum would be the law school application forum, but the problem with that is that there are very few YLS students/admits on TLS (only current students I know of are MistakenGenius, Cicero, and psychmusic). Every school has very different deferral policies. Harvard and Columbia are generally the most liberal with deferrals (being they're so large and have huge acceptance lists and waitlists). NYU and Stanford tend to be more stingy). Yale seems to grant a decent number of deferrals, but that could just be because so many are doing things like Rhodes.Schneidersbetter wrote:I have a question about undergraduate degrees and deferrals (namely, whether the school might let me graduate after next semester instead of in May if they've already granted me a deferral.) Is there a good forum to pose this question where I might get helpful answers?
As far as that. I've never seen a YLS student defer because of that reason and I assume it's pretty rare. However, I personally think you could make it worth YLS' while. Firms/PI/Government all generally prefer their applicants to have some work experience. If you could demonstrate to the admissions officers that you're going to take some classes that could be conducive to you in legal practice next semester, and that you will pursue some form of experience in the Spring, I could see them granting the deferral. Of course, this is all just based in my personal experience and people I know. The best way to find out the details to this would be to call the admissions office, since they're the ones actually granting deferrals.
Ok, a bunch to think about, thanks for taking the time to respond!KissMyAxe wrote:No problem. And as for that, I really don't know what your undergrad is like. I suppose it would be better to go for the deferral first. It would really suck if your undergrad extended you for one more semester and then Yale refused the deferral. At least if you got the deferral, even if your undergrad denied you, you could just work or something for a year to make yourself more competitive. But again, your school and YLS' admissions office know better than I do.Schneidersbetter wrote:Thanks, that was very helpful. Do you think it would make a difference if i was granted a deferral (for a different reason) and THEN asked to be allowed to prolong my undergraduate career?KissMyAxe wrote:Not really, I guess the most relevant forum would be the law school application forum, but the problem with that is that there are very few YLS students/admits on TLS (only current students I know of are MistakenGenius, Cicero, and psychmusic). Every school has very different deferral policies. Harvard and Columbia are generally the most liberal with deferrals (being they're so large and have huge acceptance lists and waitlists). NYU and Stanford tend to be more stingy). Yale seems to grant a decent number of deferrals, but that could just be because so many are doing things like Rhodes.Schneidersbetter wrote:I have a question about undergraduate degrees and deferrals (namely, whether the school might let me graduate after next semester instead of in May if they've already granted me a deferral.) Is there a good forum to pose this question where I might get helpful answers?
As far as that. I've never seen a YLS student defer because of that reason and I assume it's pretty rare. However, I personally think you could make it worth YLS' while. Firms/PI/Government all generally prefer their applicants to have some work experience. If you could demonstrate to the admissions officers that you're going to take some classes that could be conducive to you in legal practice next semester, and that you will pursue some form of experience in the Spring, I could see them granting the deferral. Of course, this is all just based in my personal experience and people I know. The best way to find out the details to this would be to call the admissions office, since they're the ones actually granting deferrals.
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Same, but nah radio silence up until now...GrayGamut wrote:Anyone receive an initial aid offer yet? I submitted the forms a couple weeks ago and I'm nervously waiting to see how many zeros are on this price tag.
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Yeah, same here. Bummer, I was kinda hoping it was my own lack of intelligence, because then one of you kind and brilliant folks could direct me and I could FINALLY KNOW.tflan19 wrote:Apparently I'm smart enough to get into YLS but not smart enough to find my finaid award letter on SIS. Did anyone get the email saying it was posted but then have a error message that "no award letters available"?
go to federal shopping list and then "view online". I was able to find my info unofficially there.GrayGamut wrote:Yeah, same here. Bummer, I was kinda hoping it was my own lack of intelligence, because then one of you kind and brilliant folks could direct me and I could FINALLY KNOW.tflan19 wrote:Apparently I'm smart enough to get into YLS but not smart enough to find my finaid award letter on SIS. Did anyone get the email saying it was posted but then have a error message that "no award letters available"?
You're wonderful, thank you!tflan19 wrote:go to federal shopping list and then "view online". I was able to find my info unofficially there.
Communicate now with those who not only know what a legal education is, but can offer you worthy advice and commentary as you complete the three most educational, yet challenging years of your law related post graduate life.
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