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#1
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I’ve heard the poor economy is expected to create a huge spike in law school admissions this year. With so many corporate lay offs and cutbacks, many people will probably decide now is as good a time as ever to go to law school. I recently found a new grant offering from Veritas Prep. Here is the basic info: “The winner will receive a Veritas Prep Admission Brief consulting package—a $3,100 value—that includes the guidance of a highly-experienced consultant from any law school to help you throughout the entire application process. The recipient will also recieve a personalized game plan to help them ace the law school application.” If you are interested in applying for this grant—just submit a one- page essay explaining why you want to go to law school to JDcontest@veritasprep.com by November 15, 2008. Visit their website for more information www.veritasprep.com/jd-contest.
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#2
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Im graduating from the University of Maryland this fall and i was wondering what my chances of getting into law school are. My Lsat was 153 and my GPA is a 2.8, which can largely be attributed to the fact that ive been working full time (40+ hours) for almost all of my college career. Thoughts anyone?
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#3
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Honestly, your chances are not good. I would put them at last then 1/10. You can try to improve your odds by crafting a perfect, standout, amazing law school application. I'd refer you to Law School Secrets or Covert Tactics to help you make a great application. For Maryland, I'd be looking for a 160 and 3.5 undergad GPA. If you look into you past and can dig up a reason (excuse) for your undergrad/LSAT performance that actually grabs a law school admissions officer within 2 sentences of your application - you may close the odds.
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#4
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I was referring to any law school really, not specifically Maryland seeing as they are quite hot on themselves.
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#5
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Yes, you can get into a good law school. You need to look away from major competitive schools and look at, say, some of the less competitive law schools in New England or any of the smaller state law schools. Don't give up on your dream of becoming a lawyer, although your academic record isn't to sharp you did work 40 hours per week, while an undergrad ---
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