Page 1 of 1

grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 8:47 am
by hopefullylawmaterial
I dropped out of a grad program at the end of my last semester. I had been so stressed and began suffering from depression since I hated my grad program and the stress my thesis was causing me. So, I left in order to regather my thoughts and focus on regaining my mental stability.

I have always wanted to go to law school, but I feared I would be rejected and didn't apply. Instead, I chose to get a Master's degree to make my application more impressive. The program turned out to be a huge mistake, and I feared leaving but had to when my mental health started to deteriorate.

I have a 3.34 undergraduate GPA and haven't taken the LSAT yet.

Do you think my leaving my graduate program will cause me to be rejected from law schools?

Honesty will be greatly appreciated! : )

Re: grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 5:12 pm
by sarahlawg
well, I did one semester of a grad program and dropped it and didn't see it affect my admissions process. Your UGPA will be what you have to overcome. Good luck!

Re: grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 7:49 pm
by tedler
.

Re: grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 7:51 pm
by patrickd139
tedler wrote:I'd think twice about law school if pressure plays havoc with your mental state--although I can see how composing a thesis could cause a unique type of misery.
For almost all disciplines, law school stress >>>>>> grad school stress at the masters level

Re: grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 11:35 pm
by tedler
.

Re: grad school dropout, what are my chances?

Posted: Sat Apr 23, 2011 11:58 pm
by AntipodeanPhil
tedler wrote:
For almost all disciplines, law school stress >>>>>> grad school stress at the masters level
Didn't say greater, just unique. Having to create something completely original would scare me a lot more than putting in 90 hour weeks. The warning still applies to the OP though.
A close friend of mine completed a JD/PhD (in Political Science) from a T1. Her view was that the PhD was harder, because of the whole thesis-writing business, but that law school was more intense. People were much more competitive in law school. Grad school is not very competitive - in my experience - because you don't need to achieve a certain rank, and the professors don't grade on a curve - they'll give everyone As, if deserved.

Anyway, "unique" sounds right to me, as does the warning.