Tag Archives | law school consulting

Law School Spotlight on: Letters of Recommendation – “Nailing Your Letters of Recommendation”

This is part of a continuing series of blogs from our team of Admissions Consultants here at Kaplan Test Prep & Admissions, showcasing various facets of a candidate’s law school application.Click here for more information on Admissions Consulting from Kaplan.

In recent weeks, there’s been a whole lot of hoopla over the incorporation of LSAC’s new “evaluation” service. But make no mistake about it:letters of recommendation (LOR’s) are, generally speaking, still the most important third-party references in the law school application process.How – you might ask – should you go about choosing your recommenders?

Call me a worrier, but based on nearly two decades of experience in writing such letters, as well as advising applicants on whom to select, the first thing that I strongly advise is that you create an initial list that contains at least one more recommender than you need.Every year, I hear from applicants who are either surprised when a potential letter writer says “no” to their request or are simply unable to track down or get a response from a chosen recommender.Quite frankly, you never know when you’re going to need a back-up.Read full post

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Law School Spotlight on: The Personal Statement – What it is and is not.

This is a continuing series of blogs from our team of Admissions Consultants here at Kaplan Test Prep & Admissions, showcasing various facets of a candidate’s law school application. Click here for more information on Admissions Consulting from Kaplan, including our Personal Statement Review package.

The personal statement is your chance to show the law school why you are the best applicant for them.You want to shine – in the stories you tell, in your reasons for wanting to go to law school, and in your writing skills.The reality is that if you have a straight-A grade point average and a perfect LSAT score, you don’t have to spend a lot of time worrying about your personal statement.Read full post

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Why is it a good idea to take the October LSAT?

To give you every advantage possible as you prep for the October LSAT, enroll in a comprehensive LSAT course by September 30th and receive our three section-specific supplemental On Demand courses for free: Logic Games On Demand, Logical Reasoning On Demand & Reading Comprehension On Demand – a $897 value.

October is an excellent time to the LSAT!“Why,” you might ask?There are several motivators this time of year.Leaves are beginning to change color, football games every Sunday, Halloween’s on the way, and, of course, there is a chill in the air!What further preamble do you need to tackle a test that carries serious implications for the rest of your life?Well, perhaps these aren’t the greatest of reasons.Let us then evaluate considerations of a more relevant nature.… Read full post

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Law School Application Spotlight: Letters of Recommendation Reviewed

This is a continuing series of blogs from our team of Admissions Consultants here at Kaplan Test Prep & Admissions, showcasing various facets of a candidate’s law school application. Click here for more information on Admissions Consulting from Kaplan, including our Personal Statement Review package.

Determining who to ask to write your letters of recommendation can feel as complicated as defining the rule against perpetuities.(That’ll be funny after your 1L property class.)Should you go with the professor with the big name but only knows you as face in a sea of 500 other students?Should you ask the president of the law firm where your mom practices?What about your rabbi who has known you since you were two?The answer to all three of these questions is probably not.Read full post

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Evaluating the New Law School Evaluations

Click here for more information on Admissions Consulting from Kaplan.

For those of us who have been around the graduate and law school admissions game any length of time, reading countless LOR’s can be a frustrating search for “the truth.”

First, potential LOR writers are spring-loaded to be complementary, otherwise they probably wouldn’t bother to write the things. When I was the university’s pre law advisor, a professor once asked me if I would “gently” tell one of my advisees that he never wrote LOR’s for students who received less than an A minus in his course.

Second, seasoned admissions personnel can spot damming between-the-line implications a mile away, even for supposedly positive LOR’s.Read full post

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Law School Scholarship: Playing the Odds

Yup, I’m the one: the one guy under thirty keeping dying sports alive. Two of my favorites? Boxing and horse racing. So what a terrific Saturday in May it was with both the Pacquiao fight and The Kentucky Derby on the same day! (In fact, my fascination for the so-called “sport of kings” led me to an internship with the New York State Racing & Wagering Board in law school.) The Derby is a grand tradition. It’s always fun to sit back and watch beautiful women in ridiculous hats sip mint juleps while you try to win a buck or two picking the ponies.… Read full post

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What are Law School Admissions Committees really looking for?

Ok, let’s start at the top…

The Admissions Committee has a two-fold goal: to bring in as competitive of a class as possible, while bringing in as diverse of a class as possible.

There’s no question that each school is looking for the strongest LSAT and GPA. At the same time, the last thing the Committee wishes to do is bring in a class in which everyone is from the same hometown, same high school, same college and same major. It makes for very boring classroom discussion. Instead, they’re looking for applicants who:

  • Are in-state and out-of-state
  • Attended private universities, state universities and community colleges
  • Majored in biology, math, music, accounting, history, engineering, English, foreign language
  • Just graduated from undergraduate school, as well as those who’ve been out of school one year, five years, ten years and twenty years

So what does this mean for you?… Read full post

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Five parts of the application

You may be curious as to how the application process works, so here goes…

I view the application process as containing five different pieces:

Over the course of the next few blogs, I will address each piece individually. In the meantime, I feel it is important for you to understand the overarching sequence of the process.

You will need to submit your transcript(s) and letters of recommendation to LSAC. It is your responsibility to make sure that LSAC receives both, and the good news is that you have the ability to track their receipt online on the LSAC website.… Read full post

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Is Law School in 2010 right for you?

If you are considering applying to law school this year, I ask you an important question: Is law school in 2010 right for you? Riding out the economy shouldn’t be your motivation for law school now. I urge you to do some soul searching as to your reasons for applying now. To assist you in this process, I pose the following questions for your consideration:

◊ I believe that investing in education is an investment in yourself. Having said that, I’m sure you’re aware that law school is expensive. Are you financially prepared for the costs you’ll incur? Resources are available to help you meet these expenses.… Read full post

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Canceling Your LSAT Score – Making the Decision

Ideally, every person who takes the LSAT goes into the testing center, takes the test, and leaves feeling confident that great results will follow. However, it’s inevitable that some test takers will succumb to the pressure of Test Day and walk away feeling anxious and uncertain.

The LSAC offers test takers the opportunity to cancel their LSAT scores. Before making that decision, one should know a few facts about canceled scores:

1.) If you choose to cancel a score, nobody will ever know your actual results on that test – not law schools, not the LSAC, not even you. It will be as if you never took it.… Read full post

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