Non Traditional Military 0L Questions
Posted: Tue Apr 07, 2015 5:41 pm
So, this will be somewhat lengthy, but I will try to organize my thoughts and questions as clearly as possible.
Me: - 25 Year old National Guardsmen deploying for a year. - ~3.0 LSAC GPA, ~3.6 Major GPA (International Relations) - 158 LSAT (taken with 0 prep, after a night out. Dumb, I know)
Situation/Plan: - Study for LSAT while overseas, focusing on the logic games (I bombed this section, missed less than 5 questions on the rest of the test) - Take LSAT while deployed if possible, or Oct 2016 if not. - Move to major city I want to go to school/practice in (Chicago/Philly, maybe Boston/NYC)
As to my above undergraduate performance/LSAT scores; I found UG to be interesting, yet wholly unchallenging, therefore I spent most of my time working and just showed up on test days, sacrificing attendance points and withdrawing from classes that bored me my freshman year. (Again, I was an idiot). I definitely have a positive trend in my grades from freshman to senior year, and I feel like the last 2 years of working professionally, managing a team of other professionals, as well as my leadership experience in the military have matured me to the point where I am finally ready to tackle law school.
Thoughts/Questions-
At 27, with 2 years of professional work experience (Sales/Marketing Management), 7 years in the reserves (1 of them deployed), and the LSAT/GPA I have now, where should I realistically look at applying? I am leaning toward Chicago; so Loyola, JM? Dream would be Northwestern. And piggybacking off of that, do I have realistic chances at Big/Mid Law?
In the case of not being able to take the LSAT overseas, I will be taking the Oct '16 LSAT. In the time between the LSAT and my 1L year, would it benefit me to try and get an admin role at a (hopefully Big Law) firm in my targeted market? Or keep working in Marketing to save as much money as possible?
I appreciate any feedback and advice (I know, dont go to law school). I can appreciate that I am looking at this from a very high level perspective at the moment, with applications being at least a year out, but as I am already behind my would-be peers, I want to be as productive and efficient with my time as possible.
Me: - 25 Year old National Guardsmen deploying for a year. - ~3.0 LSAC GPA, ~3.6 Major GPA (International Relations) - 158 LSAT (taken with 0 prep, after a night out. Dumb, I know)
Situation/Plan: - Study for LSAT while overseas, focusing on the logic games (I bombed this section, missed less than 5 questions on the rest of the test) - Take LSAT while deployed if possible, or Oct 2016 if not. - Move to major city I want to go to school/practice in (Chicago/Philly, maybe Boston/NYC)
As to my above undergraduate performance/LSAT scores; I found UG to be interesting, yet wholly unchallenging, therefore I spent most of my time working and just showed up on test days, sacrificing attendance points and withdrawing from classes that bored me my freshman year. (Again, I was an idiot). I definitely have a positive trend in my grades from freshman to senior year, and I feel like the last 2 years of working professionally, managing a team of other professionals, as well as my leadership experience in the military have matured me to the point where I am finally ready to tackle law school.
Thoughts/Questions-
At 27, with 2 years of professional work experience (Sales/Marketing Management), 7 years in the reserves (1 of them deployed), and the LSAT/GPA I have now, where should I realistically look at applying? I am leaning toward Chicago; so Loyola, JM? Dream would be Northwestern. And piggybacking off of that, do I have realistic chances at Big/Mid Law?
In the case of not being able to take the LSAT overseas, I will be taking the Oct '16 LSAT. In the time between the LSAT and my 1L year, would it benefit me to try and get an admin role at a (hopefully Big Law) firm in my targeted market? Or keep working in Marketing to save as much money as possible?
I appreciate any feedback and advice (I know, dont go to law school). I can appreciate that I am looking at this from a very high level perspective at the moment, with applications being at least a year out, but as I am already behind my would-be peers, I want to be as productive and efficient with my time as possible.