3.6/163 (third try... 156, 163, 163)
Interested in public interest/government work, no BigLaw dreams. Also a nontraditional and debt-averse, so I'm trying to maximize my scholarship potential. The schools I'm most interested in rank from about #30-#60.
For many of these schools, I'm above or around their 75ths. For some of the higher-ranking ones, I'm more around median. I know I can do better on the LSAT.
Do I...
1. Retake in December, risking losing any early admission bumps.
2. Plan on doing a retake in February to either get off of any potential WLs or negotiate higher scholarship amounts. I will also graduate in December, so I will have a bit more free time to study.
Any advice is appreciated.
Which plan of action would you recommend? Forum
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- Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2016 10:06 am
- DKM
- Posts: 83
- Joined: Sun Dec 01, 2013 11:09 pm
Re: Which plan of action would you recommend?
apply as soon as you can, and when you retake your LSAT notify those schools of your updated score (LSAC may even take care of that automatically, I'm not sure). That's what I plan on doing.
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- Posts: 11
- Joined: Fri Nov 25, 2016 10:06 am
Re: Which plan of action would you recommend?
Aren’t schools notified that you’re registered for an LSAT? I thought that schools hold applications with a pending LSAT score? Or is that just for those who don’t have a score on file already? I want to submit early, but if my application is just going to be held until January, wouldn’t that cancel any benefit for submitting early?DKM wrote:apply as soon as you can, and when you retake your LSAT notify those schools of your updated score (LSAC may even take care of that automatically, I'm not sure). That's what I plan on doing.