But imagine a workforce that has multiple religions in it. Each taking 7 days off. However, say that religion A starts the cycle on a Sunday while religion B on a Saturday. From an employer standpoint, this is a nightmare for every year that the …
This is one of my favorite LSAT questions because it requires you to really think about the practicality of a plan like this. The new calendar would standardize the days of annual events and stuff.
Answer A: No problem here. Dec 31 would fall in …
It doesn't really matter. I'd go ahead and get it now since it's good for 5 years. While you wait for your score, you can send in your transcripts and LORs etc.
Sometimes the reward for taking the time the question needs doesn't exceed the cost of doing so. For practical purposes, doing well on the LSAT really is about allocating your time to where you manage the number of questions you miss. I used a har…
I'll be a cop-out and give 2 equal pieces of advice.
1.) Don't take the exam before you are ready. It's very hard to actually do this because you want to just be done with it all, but patience is key. I took the exam twice, but I didn't have the …
The way I understand waitlists for top schools (currently on Stanford's), is that there is no deferral option; either you go this year or you'd have to decline and reapply.
Not surprised by Georgetown nor Harvard. Bit surprised by Berkeley. Extremely surprised by Columbia: I had a bet with a buddy that Columbia would jump to 3 and tie Harvard. Looks like I owe him a beer.
Very pumped for this! Just a heads up, I'm planning on going through what I think is the most difficult passage of all time for Sunday's webinar. It's Passage 3 from PT2 (very old PT way back in October 1991). Here's a link to the passage in case …
It doesn't exactly answer your question, but I found this paper a few weeks ago. Page 23 has a pretty interesting chart. Most of the T14 (unsurprisingly) swing pretty left, but the distribution is more bimodal than I expected.
http://scholar.harv…
@"Alex Divine" said:
The different colors actually bother my OCD somewhat ... I wish they would all just be one like shade of navy blue/black. Just ordered PT 80! I wonder what color it shall be?
https://www.amazon.com/Official-LSAT-PrepTest…
No, the relationship you have isn't true. Conditional reasoning and causal reasoning are different; sometimes they can be mutually exclusive and sometimes they can't be mutually exclusive.
A perfect correlation is something in which there is a per…
Only ED for a school that you would like to attend and will get a good scholarship. Other then that, it's pretty much never in one's interest to ED since it kills the ability to negotiate for more scholarship money. Wash U hands out a lot of full …
On the T14 apps, this question wasn't mandatory to answer, so you could potentially leave it blank. I think listing other peer schools is fine. More importantly, it doesn't really matter since the people reading your apps have been doing this for …
Extremely helpful. I visited all of the top 14 schools a few months ago. In particular, I met with Dean Faulk at UVA, and he told me to email him once I applied. I applied and he responded with my acceptance/Dillard scholarship less than a day la…
http://www.onalytica.com/blog/posts/top-200-most-influential-economics-blogs/
Pick a few of these and read about 5 or 6 articles a day; think about general ideas like MP, tone, method of argumentation, etc.
@Micaela_OVO
I think HYS and C offer needs based waivers; do you qualify for one via LSAC? I got a pretty bitchy email from Columbia pretty much telling me to gtfo with the merit based waiver request:
"Thank you for your interest in Columbia Law …
You can also solicit fee waivers, too. I had auto waivers from the T14 except HYS and Columbia (these don't give out fee waivers at all). I didn't get an auto waiver from NW, Cornell, Michigan, or Berkeley. I emailed all of them and they all gave…