Full scholarships at Cornell/NU Forum

Not sure where your numbers will get you? Dying to know where you stand? Come have your palms read by your fellow posters!
Post Reply
GMasters5

Bronze
Posts: 113
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 5:32 pm

Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by GMasters5 » Fri Aug 01, 2014 12:33 pm

I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship? What GPA/LSAT combo would make me competitive for the NU scholarship or is it work experience that sets you apart there? Also, I haven't seen much about Cornell's scholarships, so does anyone know if they have a full scholarship program? If so, what numbers generally warrant a full scholarship? If not, what numbers usually warrant a substantial scholarship?

schmooky

New
Posts: 73
Joined: Sat Jan 11, 2014 2:03 am

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by schmooky » Fri Aug 01, 2014 12:38 pm

.
Last edited by schmooky on Sat Jul 25, 2015 3:30 pm, edited 1 time in total.

PrideandGlory1776

Bronze
Posts: 307
Joined: Sun Mar 02, 2014 9:14 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by PrideandGlory1776 » Fri Aug 01, 2014 12:41 pm

2 people w/ 168/3.8's got em this year so if you got 168+ AND 3.8+ you should be good to go

GMasters5

Bronze
Posts: 113
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 5:32 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by GMasters5 » Fri Aug 01, 2014 12:42 pm

schmooky wrote:You can go to cornell.lawschoolnumbers.com/applicants. Click the column where it says "$$$" to sort by scholarship. For NU go to the same site but replace cornell w/ nu.


Cool thanks!

GMasters5

Bronze
Posts: 113
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 5:32 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by GMasters5 » Fri Aug 01, 2014 12:44 pm

PrideandGlory1776 wrote:2 people w/ 168/3.8's got em this year so if you got 168+ AND 3.8+ you should be good to go

M gpa will most likely be around 3.8 when I'm applying so I'll be right in the running hopefully! Do they just roll you over to RD if they don't want to accept you ED?

Want to continue reading?

Register now to search topics and post comments!

Absolutely FREE!


User avatar
bombaysippin

Gold
Posts: 1977
Joined: Fri Mar 22, 2013 3:11 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by bombaysippin » Fri Aug 01, 2014 1:03 pm

GMasters5 wrote:
PrideandGlory1776 wrote:2 people w/ 168/3.8's got em this year so if you got 168+ AND 3.8+ you should be good to go

M gpa will most likely be around 3.8 when I'm applying so I'll be right in the running hopefully! Do they just roll you over to RD if they don't want to accept you ED?
yes

somuchwaiting

New
Posts: 27
Joined: Wed Nov 06, 2013 12:00 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by somuchwaiting » Fri Aug 01, 2014 1:25 pm

GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.

User avatar
nightcheese

New
Posts: 47
Joined: Mon Jul 07, 2014 10:32 am

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by nightcheese » Fri Aug 01, 2014 5:31 pm

somuchwaiting wrote:
GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.
This.

Even if you get the $150k, you're still facing ~$81,000 at graduation. ($6k/year for tuition--which will increase each year--and $21k/year for living expenses.)

User avatar
everything_bagel

Bronze
Posts: 432
Joined: Fri Jun 27, 2014 7:10 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by everything_bagel » Fri Aug 01, 2014 11:53 pm

nightcheese wrote:
somuchwaiting wrote:
GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.
This.

Even if you get the $150k, you're still facing ~$81,000 at graduation. ($6k/year for tuition--which will increase each year--and $21k/year for living expenses.)
if it costs you $21k/yr to live in Chicago, you're doing it wrong.

Want to continue reading?

Register for access!

Did I mention it was FREE ?


Chrstgtr

Bronze
Posts: 322
Joined: Wed Mar 19, 2014 12:53 am

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by Chrstgtr » Fri Aug 01, 2014 11:57 pm

everything_bagel wrote:
nightcheese wrote:
somuchwaiting wrote:
GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.
This.

Even if you get the $150k, you're still facing ~$81,000 at graduation. ($6k/year for tuition--which will increase each year--and $21k/year for living expenses.)
if it costs you $21k/yr to live in Chicago, you're doing it wrong.
COA are also based on only a 9-month period (the time you're enrolled in classes. But the above poster is correct in that NU overestimates the COL especially when taking into account the 9-month time period it is based on.

GMasters5

Bronze
Posts: 113
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 5:32 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by GMasters5 » Sat Aug 02, 2014 12:05 am

nightcheese wrote:
somuchwaiting wrote:
GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.
This.

Even if you get the $150k, you're still facing ~$81,000 at graduation. ($6k/year for tuition--which will increase each year--and $21k/year for living expenses.)


Thanks, I hadn't looked at COL of living yet. Didn't some people get $175k this year?

slexisl1024

New
Posts: 30
Joined: Tue Jun 24, 2014 9:20 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by slexisl1024 » Sat Aug 02, 2014 12:23 am

GMasters5 wrote:
nightcheese wrote:
somuchwaiting wrote:
GMasters5 wrote:I've seen bits and pieces of info about full scholarships in the T14, but my question is regarding Cornell and NU. I know that an ED acceptance at NU leads to a full scholarship, but I'm wondering what the general consensus is to getting that scholarship?
Keep in mind that while NU guaranteed ED scholarships are $150,000, that is not actually full tuition. I know it's still substantial, but NU granted RD applicants scholarships of $165,000 this year.
This.

Even if you get the $150k, you're still facing ~$81,000 at graduation. ($6k/year for tuition--which will increase each year--and $21k/year for living expenses.)


Thanks, I hadn't looked at COL of living yet. Didn't some people get $175k this year?
Incoming NU student who was accepted Early Decision here. NU COL estimates are exaggerated significantly, and savings and/or family assistance means graduating with ~30k debt for many of us who are ED admits. NU did grant a few 165k scholarships but it seems to mostly be to folks with HYS or solid CCN numbers. I'm fairly certain the 175k scholarship and the 22x,xxx scholarship on LSN are inaccurate. I cannot be absolutely positive, but I have a hard time believing NU would pay above tuition to any incoming student, let alone students with LSAT scores and GPAs both below their 75%s. I suppose other factors (YLS level softs or work experience?) could be at play.
Northwestern with the ED scholarship is an excellent deal for anyone. You can get a very strong sense of your possible outcomes just by looking around here and LSN. If you would be ok with NU at a major discount over any of those (E.g., outside shot at H, $ at CCN etc.), ED is a good choice.

GMasters5

Bronze
Posts: 113
Joined: Sun Jul 27, 2014 5:32 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by GMasters5 » Sat Aug 02, 2014 12:30 am

Incoming NU student who was accepted Early Decision here. NU COL estimates are exaggerated significantly, and savings and/or family assistance means graduating with ~30k debt for many of us who are ED admits. NU did grant a few 165k scholarships but it seems to mostly be to folks with HYS or solid CCN numbers. I'm fairly certain the 175k scholarship and the 22x,xxx scholarship on LSN are inaccurate. I cannot be absolutely positive, but I have a hard time believing NU would pay above tuition to any incoming student, let alone students with LSAT scores and GPAs both below their 75%s. I suppose other factors (YLS level softs or work experience?) could be at play.
Northwestern with the ED scholarship is an excellent deal for anyone. You can get a very strong sense of your possible outcomes just by looking around here and LSN. If you would be ok with NU at a major discount over any of those (E.g., outside shot at H, $ at CCN etc.), ED is a good choice.[/quote][/quote]




Cool thanks! It seems hard to pass up, and I'm seriously considering doing it. The thing is that I don't have any significant work experience and I'm K-JD so I feel like it would count me out, since NU prides themselves on WE. Is that accurate or could my numbers overcome their bias?

slexisl1024

New
Posts: 30
Joined: Tue Jun 24, 2014 9:20 pm

Re: Full scholarships at Cornell/NU

Post by slexisl1024 » Sat Aug 02, 2014 12:33 am

GMasters5 wrote:Incoming NU student who was accepted Early Decision here. NU COL estimates are exaggerated significantly, and savings and/or family assistance means graduating with ~30k debt for many of us who are ED admits. NU did grant a few 165k scholarships but it seems to mostly be to folks with HYS or solid CCN numbers. I'm fairly certain the 175k scholarship and the 22x,xxx scholarship on LSN are inaccurate. I cannot be absolutely positive, but I have a hard time believing NU would pay above tuition to any incoming student, let alone students with LSAT scores and GPAs both below their 75%s. I suppose other factors (YLS level softs or work experience?) could be at play.
Northwestern with the ED scholarship is an excellent deal for anyone. You can get a very strong sense of your possible outcomes just by looking around here and LSN. If you would be ok with NU at a major discount over any of those (E.g., outside shot at H, $ at CCN etc.), ED is a good choice.
[/quote]




Cool thanks! It seems hard to pass up, and I'm seriously considering doing it. The thing is that I don't have any significant work experience and I'm K-JD so I feel like it would count me out, since NU prides themselves on WE. Is that accurate or could my numbers overcome their bias?[/quote]

Awesome question! I'm actually KJD and I know personally 2 other incoming 1Ls accepted under ED who were KJDs. I have some information regarding NU/Work Experience/#s/Being a KJD to share with you if you're interested. Just send me a pm.

Register now!

Resources to assist law school applicants, students & graduates.

It's still FREE!


Post Reply

Return to “What are my chances?”