@anonclsstudent We may have to agree to disagree, but I do in fact disagree with a lot of your post here.
First, do you have the question reference from the example you gave of the LSAT's use of many? I would like to read the original. From what yo…
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Ah, I see where you are coming from on it. I've never really stuck to the negating method, personally. It does for sure work sometimes, probably a lot of the time. But I think in this scenario, negating it isn't the best way to appr…
There are a lot of detailed, interesting points in the comments section under the "Many = Some" lesson: https://classic.7sage.com/lesson/many-some/
I think for me what it comes down to is that JY is right, and that many = some. But, it all depends …
Yeah, what @oshun1 said. Except also, this line is in the ED contract:
"Responding to the request of some peer law schools, New
York University School of Law will provide these schools with the
names of all applicants accepted to the New York Uni…
Wow, I don't know the difficulty rating of this one but it is tough. I generally read the stimulus and can have a pretty good idea of the flaw before reading the answer choices, but that's not true on this one. Process of elimination would have quic…
Anything that is polite works. I would just write something along the lines of, “Thank you so much for the opportunity, but I have been admitted under a binding contract at another school, so must withdraw from consideration at X school at this time…
Nope! Although I was working full time. I did drills in the evenings after work, then would do a full PT on Saturdays and nothing else the rest of the day. I did BR on Sunday, and if it took me more than about 3-4 hours, I would finish the BR on Mon…
I did this for a while with light dash marks, but made sure to erase them before time is up. Stray marks could potentially make the scantron not read properly. Better safe than sorry.
I later switched to filling in guesses on my first pass and then…
I think there are some good ideas above. I’d just also mention - of course it’s a ways off - but you may be better off putting it back to a natural color soon, as the pink likely wouldn’t go over well for job interviews. But partially because of tha…
I would caution you only that if you have pending applications, some schools will automatically hold them until you receive the LSAT score (they can see if you are registered). So, you may want to contact any schools you are pending at to see what t…
@KR_RealEstateJD said:
So what you would come back and do then written exam? lol
I think I saw something about them considering have it be something you do at home and then submit, can't remember if pre- or post-test. But basically like a ta…
Basically, it's all subjective. I think the biglaw payscale begins in that 251+ range, but some people don't consider firms biglaw unless they are 501+. If some statistic just references "biglaw" or "large firms", you have to ask or read fine print …
There are a lot of factors to consider. Some of the main ones are: location, career goals, acceptance requirements, scholarship options, special programs.
It helps to have a vague idea at least of what you would like to do after law school. Do you …
I think it really depends on what you mean by higher diagnostic (what’s the score?) and also what areas you need improvement in. If you’re scoring Perfect on everything except LG, then it maybe wouldn’t be worth it, because 7sage puts all of their L…
Yes, you can definitely ask them to. I did the same thing last year, and only one school pushed back (USC) and said that they would hold it incomplete until that score was in. The others all said "ok, we'll mark it complete, thanks" and that was tha…
Agreed with the points above. However, I’d still call a good standing a scholarship a type of conditional one. The condition is just different. The real opposite is a scholarship with no conditions whatsoever. That is the best type. One that simply …
FWIW, I think you’re fine on the timeline too. Doing an interview a couple of weeks from now isn’t so late, and they’ll know you had your app in earlier. I think this cycle is going to be a little more slow moving than last year, so drawing it out a…
I think it might be detrimental, but only slightly. Since you’re just a bit above medians, it might be nice to put a face with the name for them, and go a little above and beyond so they know you are serious. Kind of like writing an optional essay. …
@sandypants Oh man, can we talk about how if you let your session time out on LSAC's site, you have to close my entire browser and re-open it, otherwise it'll give an error when trying to re-open you applications? It's the most irritating thing.
Yep, you have to submit transcripts from every school (and this includes if you took any classes through a community college, either during high school or later).
It may or may not change by the time you are done with the cc. But, you really don't need to worry about it. It's most important that you are working on really understanding the material. You can worry about time later when you do actual PTs and are…
When I decided to re-apply this year, I had a goal to have my applications out in October. Instead, I sent my first one in December, the next on January 2nd, and then sent in another 5 last night. Huzzah? At least I can actually, seriously say I am …
Yes, it’s included in the “items allowed on your desktop”. The proctors can be notoriously fickle and there’s a very slim chance one could say no. But per LSAC, it’s allowed.
Business casual is usually a good rule of thumb. SoCal schools tend to lean more casual, and I’d imagine some east coast ones might lean slightly dressier.
For guys, a button down and/or sweater with non-denim pants and dress shoes is good. Sport c…
Well, I applied late last year (end of January and into February) and had ok but not great results. Berkeley rejected me, but you have my LSAT beat by a few points.
Word on the street is that last year was particularly tough on late cycle applicant…
Hi Zack! I think the best thing to do for the paid editing services is to go this page: https://classic.7sage.com/admissions/enroll/
And select which package you would like - either edit once or unlimited editing. The admissions team will get in to…
Haha this is a lot of questions, but they are all good ones and helpful to know.
They begin checking people in at 8:30. It depends on the sort of set up at your test center, how big of an area it is, etc. You can generally get into the building but…
I really depends on your goals. With your GPA though, you really need a killer LSAT score to balance it out.
Personally, I'd highly recommend extending, and/or upgrading to a bigger package, if you can afford it. If you're still on the cc, you have…