I would be happy to quiz you and do some stuff like that. I am still working through the core curriculum though as I am taking next year so I am behind you in prep. I live East Coast but do know how to do Skype.
Wow. I hope I can get a 20 point jump. Remember, learning is the number of repetitions and the time in between them. You could always take a couple of years to make some money, then get back to it aiming for your 170.
It is not you, it is that RC is very tricky. I have noticed that lots of the sections are either medically- related or very techy-related. I have training in both and sometimes I do a question and think, whoa, that would be really hard to answer if …
Hang in there guys, you might have done better than you think. And, if you have to wait to take until February, 2018, it will give you more time to work and save some money.
BTW, I totally am familiar with the picture you are talking about. It is not an uncommon development. You also see it sometimes with blast injury TBI. It is very disconcerting to the patient when it happens. It will likely resolve when you get throu…
Ummm, ahem, you are probably not going to get a lot of help from your oncologist with fixing chemo brain. If nobody has mentioned it in your oncology office to date, they are not likely going to be helpful.
Good luck!!
First off, congratulations on being a survivor thriver. Anyone who comes through cancer and chemo and is thinking about the LSAT is kicking some serious butt.
Good luck!!
I vote for speaking to her Dad. Not to ask permission but just as a way to manage the start of your relationship like allie.vandine mentioned. It costs you nothing to give a heads up and it may mean a lot to your future father-in-law. Because truth …
I have been told by admissions deans that if you score way high on the LSAT and you put some years between you and a low GPA, they (with possible exception of YHS) will disregard it. The schools have to report medians so if you are .1 in GPA below t…
I am sure that you can understand that I can not accurately discuss individual cases over the internet. I am a trauma surgeon by training and profession, not a hematologist/oncologist. All I can say generally is that ink from tattoos travels to the …
Very helpful. Thanks for digging that up. That explanation fits in with my understanding and what is universally done in my profession. You can't demand it, but if the writer offers it, hey, take a look.
That is the way that term waive your right to see letters is interpreted in my profession. I get evaluations from those I supervise and every contract I have ever signed has that I waive the right to see who wrote the evaluation. As my employment at…
You never know.... if you have an interesting story. I have been told by several Deans of Admission of local law schools that I know socially that they save at least a couple of spots each year for people they would want to hang with. One Dean told …
Actually, when you waive your right, that does not mean that you can not see it. It just means that you are not guaranteed to see it. You are not waiving the opportunity to see it if the recommender offers it unprompted.
At the risk of being Scrooge on Christmas day and granting that a tattoo is a personal expression, they carry medical risks. The largest one today is that the ink travels to the local lymph node basin and will obscure a sentinel lymph node biopsy. F…
First off, you should be congratulated on your courage and strength to leave the relationship. I am a rookie when it comes to law school stuff, so I can not comment on whether your experience is good for a diversity statement. But. as a long-time ph…
Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire is a great idea, but you can't read it in a month. I have been working on it for 30 years and am only half way through volume 5 (out of 6) ;-)
You could take the brass knuckle approach to this.... there are two outcomes here. You could not have the girl and absolutely crush the test. Or, you can not have the girl and flub the test. Now, which of those is better?