I attended U.S school then transferred to an international one and received my degree there.
I heard that law schools do not care much about GPAs if you received your degree from other countries since your academic report shows it as 'superior' or 'average' based on the number you got
In this case do law schools only consider my U.S GPA?
even if i did not receive degree there?
or do they count both? or international one more seriously?
International + US GPA, how does it work? Forum
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- Posts: 1986
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Re: International + US GPA, how does it work?
Did you complete more than 60 credit hours of college level classes in the US? If so, you will have an LSAC GPA based on those hours and your cycle will be similar to someone graduating with that GPA.rkim111 wrote:I attended U.S school then transferred to an international one and received my degree there.
I heard that law schools do not care much about GPAs if you received your degree from other countries since your academic report shows it as 'superior' or 'average' based on the number you got
In this case do law schools only consider my U.S GPA?
even if i did not receive degree there?
or do they count both? or international one more seriously?
https://www.lsac.org/applying-law-schoo ... marization
If you are not a US citizen but would have employment authorization in the US, you probably want that to be clear on your application. Anecdotally it may be harder for non-US citizens/permanent residents because schools are concerned you may not be able to secure employment post-graduation; a situation that could harm their ranking.
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- Joined: Wed Sep 12, 2018 3:55 pm
Re: International + US GPA, how does it work?
albanach wrote:Did you complete more than 60 credit hours of college level classes in the US? If so, you will have an LSAC GPA based on those hours and your cycle will be similar to someone graduating with that GPA.rkim111 wrote:I attended U.S school then transferred to an international one and received my degree there.
I heard that law schools do not care much about GPAs if you received your degree from other countries since your academic report shows it as 'superior' or 'average' based on the number you got
In this case do law schools only consider my U.S GPA?
even if i did not receive degree there?
or do they count both? or international one more seriously?
https://www.lsac.org/applying-law-schoo ... marization
If you are not a US citizen but would have employment authorization in the US, you probably want that to be clear on your application. Anecdotally it may be harder for non-US citizens/permanent residents because schools are concerned you may not be able to secure employment post-graduation; a situation that could harm their ranking.
Thank you for answering!
I am a US citizen and did not complete 60 credit hours in the US, but more than 60 credits at the international one.
In this case do they consider me as an international student? (at least my GPA?)
Your link was so helpful yet still so confusing
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- Posts: 1986
- Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2008 10:05 pm
Re: International + US GPA, how does it work?
I don't pretend to be an expert, but it looks like the school will get a GPA report for each year you spent at a US college.rkim111 wrote:
Thank you for answering!
I am a US citizen and did not complete 60 credit hours in the US, but more than 60 credits at the international one.
In this case do they consider me as an international student? (at least my GPA?)
Your link was so helpful yet still so confusing
Your international degree will also be reviewed and given an assessment of “Superior”, “Above Average”, “Average” or “Below Average”.
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