Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice Forum
-
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Mon Aug 14, 2017 10:32 pm
Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
GPA - 3.75 (Engineering)
Took LSAT June 2016 - 152 (cold take) i.e. 52 percentile
Took GRE December 2016 - 163 (V) i.e. 92 percentile and 166 (Q) i.e. 91 percentile (studied for 3 months)
7+ years of technical/engineering work experience.
Thinking of applying to Georgetown and NU. Will my LSAT score stop me from getting admitted since LSAT scores have to be reported? Or will my GRE score be the one considered?
Took LSAT June 2016 - 152 (cold take) i.e. 52 percentile
Took GRE December 2016 - 163 (V) i.e. 92 percentile and 166 (Q) i.e. 91 percentile (studied for 3 months)
7+ years of technical/engineering work experience.
Thinking of applying to Georgetown and NU. Will my LSAT score stop me from getting admitted since LSAT scores have to be reported? Or will my GRE score be the one considered?
- UVA2B
- Posts: 3570
- Joined: Sun May 22, 2016 10:48 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
Strictly speaking, LSAC and law schools have not outlined how they'll deal with applicants carrying an LSAT and a GRE. As of right now, the LSAT will be reported, which will affect you.
This seems like a pretty perfectly bated question for those of us that just don't know, so I suppose the only answer is apply and see.
This seems like a pretty perfectly bated question for those of us that just don't know, so I suppose the only answer is apply and see.
-
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Mon Aug 14, 2017 10:32 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
So at this point it will most likely be a rejectionUVA2B wrote:Strictly speaking, LSAC and law schools have not outlined how they'll deal with applicants carrying an LSAT and a GRE. As of right now, the LSAT will be reported, which will affect you.
This seems like a pretty perfectly bated question for those of us that just don't know, so I suppose the only answer is apply and see.
thought the recent news would help me out
-
- Posts: 127
- Joined: Fri May 05, 2017 8:23 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
Good news is the 152 is a great place to start since you took it cold. Start studying and take it again.
- Platopus
- Posts: 1507
- Joined: Mon Feb 13, 2017 11:20 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
.
Last edited by Platopus on Sun Dec 17, 2017 8:41 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Want to continue reading?
Register now to search topics and post comments!
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login
- Gordon_Cole
- Posts: 35
- Joined: Mon Aug 07, 2017 7:14 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
NU is not accepting until next cycle. If you can score in the area Platopus described, you'd be in good shape at a number of schools, but the game is going to change substantially after this next cycle with the potential GRE applicant deluge.2018law wrote:GPA - 3.75 (Engineering)
Took LSAT June 2016 - 152 (cold take) i.e. 52 percentile
Took GRE December 2016 - 163 (V) i.e. 92 percentile and 166 (Q) i.e. 91 percentile (studied for 3 months)
7+ years of technical/engineering work experience.
Thinking of applying to Georgetown and NU. Will my LSAT score stop me from getting admitted since LSAT scores have to be reported? Or will my GRE score be the one considered?
At the same time, it is unknown whether having a low GRE despite a high LSAT could hurt you because the reporting practices and requirements for GRE have not been substantially outlined - Arizona did report GRE scores to US News. Unfortunately, this means that you may have to bring up both scores for this / next cycle, with the GRE at a possibly higher percentile than equivalent LSAT for a school - that's pure speculation though.
-
- Posts: 533
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 3:48 am
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
Agreed that you should operate under the assumption that both your LSAT (definitely) and GRE (probably - we'll see after this year) are not high enough.
Last edited by AJordan on Sat Jan 27, 2018 11:42 am, edited 1 time in total.
-
- Posts: 335
- Joined: Tue Feb 23, 2016 10:07 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
I would agree on this - especially for someone who works in hard sciences, they're going to be suspicious of anyone who isn't scoring 98/99 percentile in quant, or at least that's what I've been told about other grad programs using the GRE. 92% is usually good for the one you're not a specialist in, but in your chosen field (I.e. Math/ tech) they're going to think you didn't study enough if you submit that score. Plus, no one really knows how they're using the GRE and you can sit it pretty much whenever you want, so if you're serious about the GRE route you probably still need to retakeAJordan wrote:Agreed that you should operate under the assumption that both your LSAT (definitely) and GRE (probably - we'll see after this year) are not high enough.
-
- Posts: 6
- Joined: Mon Aug 14, 2017 10:32 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
Going to retake the GRE soon. Have been scoring in the 98 percentile range in practice tests. What do you guys and gals think of applying with a 96-98 percentile GRE only?eck456 wrote:I would agree on this - especially for someone who works in hard sciences, they're going to be suspicious of anyone who isn't scoring 98/99 percentile in quant, or at least that's what I've been told about other grad programs using the GRE. 92% is usually good for the one you're not a specialist in, but in your chosen field (I.e. Math/ tech) they're going to think you didn't study enough if you submit that score. Plus, no one really knows how they're using the GRE and you can sit it pretty much whenever you want, so if you're serious about the GRE route you probably still need to retakeAJordan wrote:Agreed that you should operate under the assumption that both your LSAT (definitely) and GRE (probably - we'll see after this year) are not high enough.
Not sure if I have time for retaking LSAT since the next one realistically is the one in Dec and that's late in the cycle with Jan scores. I can retake GRE and apply in early Nov.
- cavalier1138
- Posts: 8007
- Joined: Fri Mar 25, 2016 8:01 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
I think that no one is going to be able to tell you how this is going to work with both scores. We know that the schools are still reporting LSAT scores for rankings purposes, so if you have a good GRE but a low LSAT, I don't think the school is going to give you a pass. No schools have indicated that they will consider the GRE in place of the LSAT if you have a reportable LSAT score.
- twiix
- Posts: 858
- Joined: Mon Feb 01, 2016 12:41 pm
Re: Unique Situation with GRE -Need Advice
Literally nobody knows. Anything you've heard up until now is entirely speculation.2018law wrote:Going to retake the GRE soon. Have been scoring in the 98 percentile range in practice tests. What do you guys and gals think of applying with a 96-98 percentile GRE only?eck456 wrote:I would agree on this - especially for someone who works in hard sciences, they're going to be suspicious of anyone who isn't scoring 98/99 percentile in quant, or at least that's what I've been told about other grad programs using the GRE. 92% is usually good for the one you're not a specialist in, but in your chosen field (I.e. Math/ tech) they're going to think you didn't study enough if you submit that score. Plus, no one really knows how they're using the GRE and you can sit it pretty much whenever you want, so if you're serious about the GRE route you probably still need to retakeAJordan wrote:Agreed that you should operate under the assumption that both your LSAT (definitely) and GRE (probably - we'll see after this year) are not high enough.
Not sure if I have time for retaking LSAT since the next one realistically is the one in Dec and that's late in the cycle with Jan scores. I can retake GRE and apply in early Nov.
With that being said, some of the professionals in Law School admissions have speculated that the GRE will be used as a means of increasing a schools GPA averages, and to further offset splitters and super splitters with high LSAT scores but low GPA's, What I mean is, they will be cherry picking the kids with 4.0's & decently high GRE scores, since there is no LSAT to pick. Choosing someone with a lower than median GPA, AND no LSAT score.. doesn't seem very ideal? The fact that you arent in the 99% range for the GRE doesn't help either, as it doesn't scream "I'm intellectually superior to my peers who are applying with 97%s".
If I were to make a guess as to which path would be of least resistance to getting into Law School, my money would be on studying for the LSAT and getting a 168+.
-
- Posts: 533
- Joined: Wed Oct 05, 2016 3:48 am
Register now!
Resources to assist law school applicants, students & graduates.
It's still FREE!
Already a member? Login