Stats in the subject line-- uGPA is mostly A's and B's with the occasional C and a fair number of F's. Got in personal trouble during college after a friend passed away-- Dean's list first semester (before he passed away) and last semester (when I straightened my shit out). Did a lot of drinking, haven't touched alcohol since. Undergrad at William and Mary in Economics and English. Taking the June LSAT, and my last 3 practice test scores have been 176, 178, 175. Not a URM.
Graduated in 2016, have been successfully employed at a large corporate since then-- been promoted, got certs, etc.
My boss would write an excellent letter of rec, as would a professor from undergrad with whom I took one class during the bad period and one class my final semester.
I'm from NJ, would like to do BigLaw in an east coast city (preferably NY) but understand that both the NY schools are probably out of reach.
Do I have a reasonable chance at any of the T14, Rutgers, or Seton Hall? I understand that NYC firms will sometimes take the best students at the latter two. I'd happily practice in DC, too-- I had another professor whose classes I aced who worked at the DoJ. Any advice would be appreciated, will happily provide any requested additional info.
2.6 uGPA, High 170s. Who'll take me? Forum
-
- Posts: 31
- Joined: Fri Jan 05, 2018 9:27 pm
Re: 2.6 uGPA, High 170s. Who'll take me?
Is there an update?
-
- Posts: 280
- Joined: Thu Jul 25, 2019 9:05 am
Re: 2.6 uGPA, High 170s. Who'll take me?
Get your 176 and you will probably get one or two of the t14, and almost definitely one of top 20 if you’re willing to expand your net.
- LSATWiz.com
- Posts: 983
- Joined: Mon Jun 12, 2017 10:37 pm
Re: 2.6 uGPA, High 170s. Who'll take me?
Retake if you don’t eclipse a 172. It’s stressful the first time, and natural to underperform.
Want to continue reading?
Register now to search topics and post comments!
Absolutely FREE!
Already a member? Login