161 LSAT, 3.85 GPA
Posted: Sat Nov 06, 2010 5:34 pm
Hello everyone,
I'm hoping for a little advice on applications after hearing so much mixed advice elsewhere. My stats/info:
LSAT: 161
GPA: 3.85
B.A., Classics from University of Colorado at Boulder (Minor: Political Science)
Currently writing honors thesis
From rural town in Colorado (regional diversity?)
Active in many intramural sports
Active musician
Active in Mortar Board Honor Society and Phi Beta Kappa
The schools with which I am most concerned are the ones that appear to be out of my reach based on their respective LSAT and GPA statistics. These schools include:
University of Texas at Austin
UCLA
USC
Fordham
Boalt-UC Berkeley (I would really like to attend Boalt, but I am not convinced my LSAT is high enough to even be considered)
Columbia (I thought Columbia was practically impossible, but I recently received a letter asking me to check them out as "students from my undergraduate institution have consistently performed well there." Is there any worth in such a letter, or is this just to improve the school's selectivity?)
Which, if any, of the aforementioned schools are even worth applying to in my situation (I understand that the "school of my dreams" is always worth pursuing, but I am asking for realistic chances of admission)? Thank you in advance for any responses!
I'm hoping for a little advice on applications after hearing so much mixed advice elsewhere. My stats/info:
LSAT: 161
GPA: 3.85
B.A., Classics from University of Colorado at Boulder (Minor: Political Science)
Currently writing honors thesis
From rural town in Colorado (regional diversity?)
Active in many intramural sports
Active musician
Active in Mortar Board Honor Society and Phi Beta Kappa
The schools with which I am most concerned are the ones that appear to be out of my reach based on their respective LSAT and GPA statistics. These schools include:
University of Texas at Austin
UCLA
USC
Fordham
Boalt-UC Berkeley (I would really like to attend Boalt, but I am not convinced my LSAT is high enough to even be considered)
Columbia (I thought Columbia was practically impossible, but I recently received a letter asking me to check them out as "students from my undergraduate institution have consistently performed well there." Is there any worth in such a letter, or is this just to improve the school's selectivity?)
Which, if any, of the aforementioned schools are even worth applying to in my situation (I understand that the "school of my dreams" is always worth pursuing, but I am asking for realistic chances of admission)? Thank you in advance for any responses!