How can one bad year affect your chances?
Posted: Tue Jul 23, 2013 12:31 am
It irks me that I slipped up on one, since I'm normally a straight-A student and have been since. Any thoughts, comments, or suggestions are very well appreciated as that is why I'm here.
I started out in a community college and earned about a 3.88 GPA with over 90 credits (I changed majors). Then I transferred to a party school, almost completely withdrew the first semester, and got straight Fs the second semester (I don't think I even set foot in a classroom that semester). The two semesters netted a 0.80 GPA with 15 hours. I took some classes at a correspondence university, 3.76 GPA with 25 hours. Then I transferred to a middle-of-the-road university--not too shabby, it is expected to become a T1 in a few years--and have a 4.1 GPA (when counting A+ grades as 4.3s). I'll graduate next year with a BBA in Accounting simultaneously with a M.S. Accy. For the next year, I would be surprised if I don't have a mix of A and A+ grades. Expected Undergarduate GPA at graduation: 3.68. Undergraduate GPA without bad semester: 3.92. Graduate GPA 4.0. The upward trend is pretty obvious.
My plans after graduation are to work either at a Big 4 accounting firm, compliance at a bank, or regulatory (FDIC or IRS) for 2-3 years. In this time I will earn a CPA license. Then I will take the LSAT. With an appropriate study regimen I should be able to score 170, give or take.
There are a few other less important things, but they may sway a borderline decision. I am fluent in Mandarin. I've lived and worked abroad in the UK and Hong Kong. I grew up as an expatriate in the Middle East and have remained fairly current on affairs in that region. I've overcome a pervasive developmental disorder--coincidentally I made great strides in overcoming this in the same time as my bad academic year.
That's a lot about myself, so here's my question: would my circumstances merit consideration beyond simply punching 3.68 GPA and 170 LSAT into the admissions calculator?
I started out in a community college and earned about a 3.88 GPA with over 90 credits (I changed majors). Then I transferred to a party school, almost completely withdrew the first semester, and got straight Fs the second semester (I don't think I even set foot in a classroom that semester). The two semesters netted a 0.80 GPA with 15 hours. I took some classes at a correspondence university, 3.76 GPA with 25 hours. Then I transferred to a middle-of-the-road university--not too shabby, it is expected to become a T1 in a few years--and have a 4.1 GPA (when counting A+ grades as 4.3s). I'll graduate next year with a BBA in Accounting simultaneously with a M.S. Accy. For the next year, I would be surprised if I don't have a mix of A and A+ grades. Expected Undergarduate GPA at graduation: 3.68. Undergraduate GPA without bad semester: 3.92. Graduate GPA 4.0. The upward trend is pretty obvious.
My plans after graduation are to work either at a Big 4 accounting firm, compliance at a bank, or regulatory (FDIC or IRS) for 2-3 years. In this time I will earn a CPA license. Then I will take the LSAT. With an appropriate study regimen I should be able to score 170, give or take.
There are a few other less important things, but they may sway a borderline decision. I am fluent in Mandarin. I've lived and worked abroad in the UK and Hong Kong. I grew up as an expatriate in the Middle East and have remained fairly current on affairs in that region. I've overcome a pervasive developmental disorder--coincidentally I made great strides in overcoming this in the same time as my bad academic year.
That's a lot about myself, so here's my question: would my circumstances merit consideration beyond simply punching 3.68 GPA and 170 LSAT into the admissions calculator?