Can a last minute retake benefit someone who wants to enroll for next fall?
Posted: Tue Mar 14, 2017 8:13 pm
Hey guys, so I wasnt sure if this fell under "choosing a law school" or here, so I opted for the seemingly more relevant sub-forum
So some brief background:
GPA: 2.8
LSAT: 166
Average Softs
Wanting to practice in Chicago
Now, on the December administration, I failed to bubble in two questions i KNOW i got correct going through the exam. Both were early LR questions, and will likely always haunt my nightmares. These two cost me a 168. On top of this, my watch didnt work going into he exam, and I was all around a nervous wreck.
Discouraged, I applied to a handful of schools not expecting much. While I was waitlisted/admitted/denied as I expected, UIUC offered me a scholarship a LOT larger than I expected to the tune of about a 65-75% (depending on my personal living expenditures) ride.
For personal reasons, I'd very much prefer not to wait a year. HOWEVER, I ust wondered if, hypothetically, I were to retake the LSAT in June, could a significantly better score provide any bargaining power to scholarship re-negotiation at the last minute? By my logic, at the very worst, I perform no/marginally better and can matriculate. On the other hand, If I were to knock it out of the park (as I feel I should have, my preptests were in the low 170s for the most part) I could at the very least back out and re-apply for an even more generous scholarship OR attempt to get it raised before fall semester starts.
Again, I want to practice in the Chicagoland area. I am well aware my undergrad performance bars me from a realistic (or fiscally worthwhile) shot at the midwest T-14 like NU or Michigan.
I'm just curious as to what could potentially be gained from a last-minute LSAT boost of a significant magnitude.
So some brief background:
GPA: 2.8
LSAT: 166
Average Softs
Wanting to practice in Chicago
Now, on the December administration, I failed to bubble in two questions i KNOW i got correct going through the exam. Both were early LR questions, and will likely always haunt my nightmares. These two cost me a 168. On top of this, my watch didnt work going into he exam, and I was all around a nervous wreck.
Discouraged, I applied to a handful of schools not expecting much. While I was waitlisted/admitted/denied as I expected, UIUC offered me a scholarship a LOT larger than I expected to the tune of about a 65-75% (depending on my personal living expenditures) ride.
For personal reasons, I'd very much prefer not to wait a year. HOWEVER, I ust wondered if, hypothetically, I were to retake the LSAT in June, could a significantly better score provide any bargaining power to scholarship re-negotiation at the last minute? By my logic, at the very worst, I perform no/marginally better and can matriculate. On the other hand, If I were to knock it out of the park (as I feel I should have, my preptests were in the low 170s for the most part) I could at the very least back out and re-apply for an even more generous scholarship OR attempt to get it raised before fall semester starts.
Again, I want to practice in the Chicagoland area. I am well aware my undergrad performance bars me from a realistic (or fiscally worthwhile) shot at the midwest T-14 like NU or Michigan.
I'm just curious as to what could potentially be gained from a last-minute LSAT boost of a significant magnitude.