3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex. Forum
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Tue Jul 06, 2010 10:28 pm
3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Did my undergrad at the University of Arizona. I'm interested in going to UCLA, USC, or Santa Clara for law school. What are my chances?
For the past 3 years I've worked in the oil and gas industry as a designer of static equipment for oil refineries. I hate it, lol.
Thanks everyone for the input!
For the past 3 years I've worked in the oil and gas industry as a designer of static equipment for oil refineries. I hate it, lol.
Thanks everyone for the input!
- kalvano
- Posts: 11951
- Joined: Mon Sep 07, 2009 2:24 am
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Just a thought, pretty sure you could go to Northwestern if you wanted.
-
- Posts: 417
- Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:53 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
To be honest, your work experience and major will make almost no difference in your cycle (3.52 electrical engineering here, BS and ScM). If you want to know your chances, I'd start with lawschoolpredictor. It was reasonably accurate for me. Anything "consider" or above you have a shot at.
EDIT: It appears that anything outside of the top 9 schools or so you have a reasonable shot at. I'd apply to a bunch in the T14.
Congrats on the great LSAT score.
EDIT: It appears that anything outside of the top 9 schools or so you have a reasonable shot at. I'd apply to a bunch in the T14.
Congrats on the great LSAT score.
Last edited by icydash on Tue Jul 06, 2010 10:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- PLATONiC
- Posts: 358
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:13 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
I think you have an excellent chance at all of those schools. Although USC/UCLA tend to emphasize GPA a little more than usual, your work experience coupled with that awesome LSAT score might even yield a fat scholarship as well. I think you should focus on writing a sexy personal statement, as well as obtaining a sexy letter of recommendation (LOR) from a sexy scholar that you haven't had sex with.
- PLATONiC
- Posts: 358
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:13 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
I'm somewhat skeptical about this year's law school predictor.. the only way we can somewhat confirm is predictive value is by seeing next year's results. I have a feeling that this year's cycle might be unrepresentative of the rest.icydash wrote:To be honest, your work experience and major will make almost no difference in your cycle (3.52 electrical engineering here, BS and ScM). If you want to know your chances, I'd start with lawschoolpredictor. It was reasonably accurate for me. Anything "consider" or above you have a shot at.
Want to continue reading?
Register now to search topics and post comments!
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
-
- Posts: 417
- Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:53 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Do you think it was less or more accurate?PLATONiC wrote:I'm somewhat skeptical about this year's law school predictor.. the only way we can somewhat confirm is predictive value is by seeing next year's results. I have a feeling that this year's cycle might be unrepresentative of the rest.icydash wrote:To be honest, your work experience and major will make almost no difference in your cycle (3.52 electrical engineering here, BS and ScM). If you want to know your chances, I'd start with lawschoolpredictor. It was reasonably accurate for me. Anything "consider" or above you have a shot at.
-
- Posts: 2
- Joined: Tue Jul 06, 2010 10:28 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Heh. Yeah. Thanks to the poster who directed me to lawschoolpredictor.com. That site makes me feel better about my subpar GPA.PLATONiC wrote:I think you have an excellent chance at all of those schools. Although USC/UCLA tend to emphasize GPA a little more than usual, your work experience coupled with that awesome LSAT score might even yield a fat scholarship as well. I think you should focus on writing a sexy personal statement, as well as obtaining a sexy letter of recommendation (LOR) from a sexy scholar that you haven't had sex with.
- PLATONiC
- Posts: 358
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:13 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Since I say that it's unrepresentative of future admissions cycles, I'm saying that it might be less accurate. This is an exceptional case, but Cornell experienced a 50% increase in application volume.. other schools, although comparatively less drastic, have nonetheless experienced a sharp increase as well. This might give some reasonable minded people such as myself that schools were probably a little more selective this year that previous years. It might as well be the case for future years as well. I personally like to use hourumd.com than lawschoolpredictor, since I get to see an applicant's profile as well as all the other schools he/she has applied to.icydash wrote:Do you think it was less or more accurate?PLATONiC wrote:I'm somewhat skeptical about this year's law school predictor.. the only way we can somewhat confirm is predictive value is by seeing next year's results. I have a feeling that this year's cycle might be unrepresentative of the rest.icydash wrote:To be honest, your work experience and major will make almost no difference in your cycle (3.52 electrical engineering here, BS and ScM). If you want to know your chances, I'd start with lawschoolpredictor. It was reasonably accurate for me. Anything "consider" or above you have a shot at.
-
- Posts: 417
- Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2008 7:53 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
Didn't know that site existed, cool. And of course, there is always lawschoolnumbersPLATONiC wrote:Since I say that it's unrepresentative of future admissions cycles, I'm saying that it might be less accurate. This is an exceptional case, but Cornell experienced a 50% increase in application volume.. other schools, although comparatively less drastic, have nonetheless experienced a sharp increase as well. This might give some reasonable minded people such as myself that schools were probably a little more selective this year that previous years. It might as well be the case for future years as well. I personally like to use hourumd.com than lawschoolpredictor, since I get to see an applicant's profile as well as all the other schools he/she has applied to.icydash wrote:Do you think it was less or more accurate?PLATONiC wrote:I'm somewhat skeptical about this year's law school predictor.. the only way we can somewhat confirm is predictive value is by seeing next year's results. I have a feeling that this year's cycle might be unrepresentative of the rest.icydash wrote:To be honest, your work experience and major will make almost no difference in your cycle (3.52 electrical engineering here, BS and ScM). If you want to know your chances, I'd start with lawschoolpredictor. It was reasonably accurate for me. Anything "consider" or above you have a shot at.
- Richie Tenenbaum
- Posts: 2118
- Joined: Wed Dec 31, 2008 6:17 am
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
With those numbers, you'll be very competitive at Michigan, UVA, Penn, and Northwestern and be a long shot at NYU and Chicago. If you're interested in California, the GPA is a bit of a bummer since Berkeley, Stanford, UCLA, and USC all emphasize GPA. You should still be competitive at USC and UCLA, but you don't have much of a shot at Berkeley.blewp wrote:Did my undergrad at the University of Arizona. I'm interested in going to UCLA, USC, or Santa Clara for law school. What are my chances?
For the past 3 years I've worked in the oil and gas industry as a designer of static equipment for oil refineries. I hate it, lol.
Thanks everyone for the input!
My suggestion: Plan on applying to 9-12 schools, get your apps in as early as possible, and start working on your personal statement right now.
Hourumd.com uses the data from LSN. I think hourumd is great, but be careful about putting to much emphasis on older cycles.icydash wrote:Didn't know that site existed, cool. And of course, there is always lawschoolnumbersPLATONiC wrote:I personally like to use hourumd.com than lawschoolpredictor, since I get to see an applicant's profile as well as all the other schools he/she has applied to.
- PLATONiC
- Posts: 358
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2009 8:13 pm
Re: 3.3 GPA in Mechanical Engineering, 173 LSAT, 3 yrs work ex.
I forgot to say, as the above poster mentioned, you have an excellent chance at Michigan. If I were you, I'd ED there, but then again, I wouldn't be able to forgo the massive scholarships that you could potentially receive from the list of schools you presented.
Register now!
Resources to assist law school applicants, students & graduates.
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login