2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances Forum
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2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
Hello!
I am a Canadian student from a top Canadian university interested in furthering my studies in the US. I have a terrible cGPA but a decent LSAT and was wondering if I'd have a shot at Top 20 schools in the states. Thanks!
I am a Canadian student from a top Canadian university interested in furthering my studies in the US. I have a terrible cGPA but a decent LSAT and was wondering if I'd have a shot at Top 20 schools in the states. Thanks!
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Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
There's almost no data so it's a guessing game. Is there any mitigating reason for your GPA? How far out from school are you? Don't suppose you're a URM?canuk95 wrote:Hello!
I am a Canadian student from a top Canadian university interested in furthering my studies in the US. I have a terrible cGPA but a decent LSAT and was wondering if I'd have a shot at Top 20 schools in the states. Thanks!
I think you'd be applying everywhere. I'd bet you have a shot somewhere in the T-20 range, but whether or not that comes with any money would be anyone's guess.
You can't improve your numbers at all, so I'd advise applying to every school in the T-20 minus HYS because you're not getting in to those schools. Your personal statement should be excellent. You've plenty of time before applications open, so craft a strong Why X essay for every school, using research to draw upon factors unique to that school and make it sincere.
If you have no success, I'd wait a few years to separate you further from school and show you can be successful professionally, then try again.
- KunAgnis
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Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
On that note, it's always a good idea to visit schools you have a strong interest in. You get an opportunity to meet with professors and students (if you talk with the schools, professors, and students ahead of time) which can help you strengthen your Why X essays.albanach wrote:
There's almost no data so it's a guessing game. Is there any mitigating reason for your GPA? How far out from school are you? Don't suppose you're a URM?
I think you'd be applying everywhere. I'd bet you have a shot somewhere in the T-20 range, but whether or not that comes with any money would be anyone's guess.
You can't improve your numbers at all, so I'd advise applying to every school in the T-20 minus HYS because you're not getting in to those schools. Your personal statement should be excellent. You've plenty of time before applications open, so craft a strong Why X essay for every school, using research to draw upon factors unique to that school and make it sincere.
If you have no success, I'd wait a few years to separate you further from school and show you can be successful professionally, then try again.
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Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
Hi, thanks for your response. I don't think it would count as a mitigating reason, but my undergraduate was in engineering science and I was co-founder of a start-up in machine vision which kept me away from classes. I would essentially only write midterms and finals, never really attended lectures, but you can't put that in an essay haha.albanach wrote:There's almost no data so it's a guessing game. Is there any mitigating reason for your GPA? How far out from school are you? Don't suppose you're a URM?canuk95 wrote:Hello!
I am a Canadian student from a top Canadian university interested in furthering my studies in the US. I have a terrible cGPA but a decent LSAT and was wondering if I'd have a shot at Top 20 schools in the states. Thanks!
I think you'd be applying everywhere. I'd bet you have a shot somewhere in the T-20 range, but whether or not that comes with any money would be anyone's guess.
You can't improve your numbers at all, so I'd advise applying to every school in the T-20 minus HYS because you're not getting in to those schools. Your personal statement should be excellent. You've plenty of time before applications open, so craft a strong Why X essay for every school, using research to draw upon factors unique to that school and make it sincere.
If you have no success, I'd wait a few years to separate you further from school and show you can be successful professionally, then try again.
- KunAgnis
- Posts: 303
- Joined: Mon Apr 13, 2015 11:41 pm
Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
I forgot to add - you might want to research whether the schools are splitter-friendly or not. Some schools are traditionally known to be more splitter-friendly (ones off my head are NYU [though probably not to your GPA, though I'm not 100% sure either way], UVA, and NU). I personally do think you could get into at least one T13 but whether it'll be worth it or not will be up for a guess.
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Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
Aren't Canadian universities still foreign universities? In that case, OP's going to receive a letter grade evaluation from LSAC. Possibly will be an "Average" - since schools don't need to report OP's uGPA, it might be a mitigating factor in OP's favor.
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Re: 2.91 cGPA, 177 LSAT Chances
No, my understanding is that LSAC treats Canadian GPAs just like U.S. GPAs.Lxwind wrote:Aren't Canadian universities still foreign universities? In that case, OP's going to receive a letter grade evaluation from LSAC. Possibly will be an "Average" - since schools don't need to report OP's uGPA, it might be a mitigating factor in OP's favor.
I second albanach's advice to blanket the T20. I'd expect OP to get in to at least one or two schools in the 14-20 range (possibly with some money, especially at WUSTL which tends to be generous), and maybe even one of the lower T13s (though probably at sticker). But the cycle will be unpredictable.