URM African American Males Forum
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Failure to follow these rules will get you outed, warned, or banned."
- brinicolec
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2016 7:09 pm
Re: URM African American Males
I think a high GPA is going to lead to acceptances because it may be seen as somewhat of an anomaly (based on some of the posts I've seen ITT), but I do think that a high LSAT also holds a significant amount of weight -- especially if it's still strong when compared to their 25/50/75. Obviously, the ideal situation is a high GPA + a high LSAT lol.
I've seen people say the boost for AAs is as high as like +10 -- though that seems quite excessive.
I also agree with some of the commentary on GPAs not necessarily being the greatest indicators of academic capability, especially when some people (such as myself) could potentially write GPA addenda but choose not to because of potential stigmas tied to issues dealt with during UG that led to poorer performance -- which was something that ppl on here told me to avoid AND something that I kind of felt adcomms may not be able to get over when considering my application.
As someone who was on Dean's List my first and second years of college and only began to see a drop in my GPA when I started to have to deal with the issues that I wasn't comfortable telling adcomms about (and ended up with a sub-3.5 GPA), it is somewhat frustrating because while GPA addenda are welcome, sometimes it's something that you're not comfortable sharing or something that you know people have difficulty understanding that impacted your grades.
Tbh, all grading systems are kind of trash. Lol.
I've seen people say the boost for AAs is as high as like +10 -- though that seems quite excessive.
I also agree with some of the commentary on GPAs not necessarily being the greatest indicators of academic capability, especially when some people (such as myself) could potentially write GPA addenda but choose not to because of potential stigmas tied to issues dealt with during UG that led to poorer performance -- which was something that ppl on here told me to avoid AND something that I kind of felt adcomms may not be able to get over when considering my application.
As someone who was on Dean's List my first and second years of college and only began to see a drop in my GPA when I started to have to deal with the issues that I wasn't comfortable telling adcomms about (and ended up with a sub-3.5 GPA), it is somewhat frustrating because while GPA addenda are welcome, sometimes it's something that you're not comfortable sharing or something that you know people have difficulty understanding that impacted your grades.
Tbh, all grading systems are kind of trash. Lol.
- Mr_Chukes
- Posts: 1162
- Joined: Wed Dec 14, 2016 5:01 pm
Re: URM African American Males
For USC in the box that said do you believe your GPA shows your academic performance. GPA or LSAT, I can't remember which one. I wrote how I believed it did not show my performance because in many of my classes I have set the curves on test and have been seen as the brightest student in the room. They took that lol. It is true though.brinicolec wrote:I think a high GPA is going to lead to acceptances because it may be seen as somewhat of an anomaly (based on some of the posts I've seen ITT), but I do think that a high LSAT also holds a significant amount of weight -- especially if it's still strong when compared to their 25/50/75. Obviously, the ideal situation is a high GPA + a high LSAT lol.
I've seen people say the boost for AAs is as high as like +10 -- though that seems quite excessive.
I also agree with some of the commentary on GPAs not necessarily being the greatest indicators of academic capability, especially when some people (such as myself) could potentially write GPA addenda but choose not to because of potential stigmas tied to issues dealt with during UG that led to poorer performance -- which was something that ppl on here told me to avoid AND something that I kind of felt adcomms may not be able to get over when considering my application.
As someone who was on Dean's List my first and second years of college and only began to see a drop in my GPA when I started to have to deal with the issues that I wasn't comfortable telling adcomms about (and ended up with a sub-3.5 GPA), it is somewhat frustrating because while GPA addenda are welcome, sometimes it's something that you're not comfortable sharing or something that you know people have difficulty understanding that impacted your grades.
Tbh, all grading systems are kind of trash. Lol.
- brinicolec
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2016 7:09 pm
Re: URM African American Males
I didn't really have to deal with any curved classes lolMr_Chukes wrote:For USC in the box that said do you believe your GPA shows your academic performance. GPA or LSAT, I can't remember which one. I wrote how I believed it did not show my performance because in many of my classes I have set the curves on test and have been seen as the brightest student in the room. They took that lol. It is true though.brinicolec wrote:I think a high GPA is going to lead to acceptances because it may be seen as somewhat of an anomaly (based on some of the posts I've seen ITT), but I do think that a high LSAT also holds a significant amount of weight -- especially if it's still strong when compared to their 25/50/75. Obviously, the ideal situation is a high GPA + a high LSAT lol.
I've seen people say the boost for AAs is as high as like +10 -- though that seems quite excessive.
I also agree with some of the commentary on GPAs not necessarily being the greatest indicators of academic capability, especially when some people (such as myself) could potentially write GPA addenda but choose not to because of potential stigmas tied to issues dealt with during UG that led to poorer performance -- which was something that ppl on here told me to avoid AND something that I kind of felt adcomms may not be able to get over when considering my application.
As someone who was on Dean's List my first and second years of college and only began to see a drop in my GPA when I started to have to deal with the issues that I wasn't comfortable telling adcomms about (and ended up with a sub-3.5 GPA), it is somewhat frustrating because while GPA addenda are welcome, sometimes it's something that you're not comfortable sharing or something that you know people have difficulty understanding that impacted your grades.
Tbh, all grading systems are kind of trash. Lol.
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- Posts: 135
- Joined: Fri Jul 22, 2016 11:27 pm
Re: URM African American Males
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Last edited by lnsl123 on Mon Mar 13, 2017 4:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Posts: 5
- Joined: Sat Nov 19, 2016 9:45 pm
Re: URM African American Males
Is Affirmative Action in every state when it comes to law school or certain states? Do they consider URM's applying to Law school differently in every state?
- brinicolec
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2016 7:09 pm
Re: URM African American Males
If I'm remembering correctly, some states don't do AA. I believe some discussion has been had about different states considering URMs differently but I'm not sure whether or not it's true.willmarl wrote:Is Affirmative Action in every state when it comes to law school or certain states? Do they consider URM's applying to Law school differently in every state?
- PrezRand
- Posts: 1608
- Joined: Sat Jun 13, 2015 4:31 pm
Re: URM African American Males
I always thought AA only applied to the t14+ best regional schools
- brinicolec
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2016 7:09 pm
Re: URM African American Males
You're talking AA as in affirmative action, right? I don't believe that's the case.PrezRand wrote:I always thought AA only applied to the t14+ best regional schools
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- Posts: 2151
- Joined: Wed Jan 15, 2014 2:18 am
Re: URM African American Males
I do think the most noticeable affirmative action boost is at the T25 schools, i.e., you have a better chance of admittance w/ $ being slightly below both medians at a T-14 as opposed to being slightly below both medians at Cardozo. That's just my guess, though.
Last edited by runinthefront on Fri Jan 26, 2018 11:12 pm, edited 1 time in total.
- brinicolec
- Posts: 4479
- Joined: Wed Jun 29, 2016 7:09 pm
Re: URM African American Males
From a stance of it being more noticeable, I could see that. But I think that AA is also at other schools. I'd imagine it's more noticeable at the top schools because those are the schools that often have medians that are above what is common for minority students (for a variety of reasons).runinthefront wrote:I do think the most noticeable affirmative action boost is at the T25 schools, i.e., you have a better chance of admittance w/ $ being slightly below both medians at a T-14 as opposed to being slightly below both medians at Cardozo. That's just my guess, though.
I also wouldn't know though because the highest (or lowest, depending on how you look at it) school I applied to was #25.