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RPI-Fan
10-03-2007, 11:06 PM
So, from a thread or two on the main forum, some of you may or may not know that I am in the process of applying to law school. While I went from completely waffling on whether I wanted to go several months ago, at this time I am really committed to going to the best place I can and earning my J.D. with as good grades as possible, and figuring things out from there (whether it be industry, firm, consulting, graduate school, or medical school). So, I am in the process of finalizing my materials that go through the central law school processing cartel (errr... service) known as LSAC.

Actually, LSAC is quite useful. Even though they charge fees, the fact that they manage your LSAT score, your transcripts, your recommendations, essays, and your applications is quite useful. Basically, you have to fill out one "full" application and the rest are extraordinarily easy to get out the door. In addition, they give you the option of furnishing your LSAT scores to universities, which can be remarkably helpful (more on this in a bit).

So, anyways, I know exactly two things about what decisions I will make for law school at this time...

1) I will go to Yale if I am admitted.
2) I will go to Harvard if I am admitted and not admitted to Yale.

Other than that, it is sort of wide open. Fortunately, the schools have been helping me a lot recently to narrow things down. One and a half months ago Duke sent me a fee waiver and invitation to apply; normally they wouldn't have been on my list for whatever reason, but after this offer and thinking about their location and the fact that I could probably play club hockey or soccer there, and that I relatively like the South, I decided I would definitely apply there, and in fact they moved toward the top of my list. In the following month, I've gotten about a dozen or so fee waiver offers. Some of them are junk law schools, but some of them are quite Ok. The notable ones are (in roughly chronological order) Illinois, Texas-Austin, UCLA, Indiana, and just recently Columbia. The Columbia waiver is quite a surprise and again is another place I'll now apply that I hadn't planned on.

So anyways, basically the purpose of this dynasty is to jot down thoughts on the variety of options and basically track the timeline on my decision-making process. I'm not sure, but I think I have a chance to get into Yale and Harvard despite my LSAT and GPA only being at the 25th percentile of their enrolled students. The reason for this is the fact that I have an engineering background, specifically civil engineering, which frankly isn't all that common of a major. I've read that engineering is kind of given a GPA "boost" by default when applications are reviewed, so my GPA may not be as troublesome as it appears. So between the GPA boost, my reasonable LSAT score, and my unique academic background (I also have a letter of recommendation from the New York State Attorney General's Office from a unique internship position that I work(ed) in), I have a remote chance of getting into Harvard and Yale.

Now, that isn't to say my odds are good. I'd give myself about a 10% chance of Yale, and a 20% chance of Harvard. But if you multiply those together, that means I have a 28% chance of getting into one of the two, which is certainly not laughable. And beyond that, I give myself about a 75% chance of Columbia, 80% chance of Duke, and 90+% chance anywhere else I desire.

So at this point I think my list is:

1) Yale
2) Harvard
3) Duke
4) Columbia
5) ???

(5) will probably be filled by whichever of the highly-ranked state schools can make me some kind of enticing offer, financially or what they have for club athletics or otherwise. Columbia would be ahead of Duke on my list except for the fact that I absolutely hate living in big cities. In fact, it should probably be lower on the list for this reason. But it isn't, for now. I suspect that will change once I get a better idea what is going on with the land-grant highly-ranked state schools.

More shortly, if anybody reads!...


Application Tracker

Yale (?)
Stanford (?)
Harvard (?)
Duke (IN - November 2, 2007)
Virginia (?)
Michigan (IN - December 3, 2007)
Cal (?)
Cornell (IN - December 24, 2007)
Vanderbilt (IN - December 3, 2007)
Texas (IN - December 6, 2007 [$7k/year & in-state tuition])
Illinois (?)
Notre Dame (IN - December 15, 2007 [$15k/year])
George Washington (?)
Wisconsin (?)
Northwestern (?)
NYU (IN - December 21, 2007)
UPenn (?)

st.cronin
10-03-2007, 11:21 PM
How do you get them to waive the fee?

RPI-Fan
10-03-2007, 11:28 PM
As I mentioned, the LSAC cartel coordinates the LSAT test and gives the option of having them make your score available to law schools. Having assumed that fee waivers were probably one consequence of this (and the worst case scenario is I'd get some junk mail from school that I won't consider), I gladly accepted this option.

I took the LSAT in June, got my score in July, and Duke gave me the first fee waiver in late July (they e-mailed me with the offer... Duke is interesting because they also said they will answer my application within 1 week). Then a while with only non-waiver material from relatively shitty schools, but in the past month I've gotten the other waivers mentioned above. I have no clue if more will keep coming or not. I suspect the wave (no pun intended) is almost passed.

I have to say, I was shocked when I got the waiver from Duke. Then, when I got the Columbia waiver today, I was absolutely floored.

st.cronin
10-03-2007, 11:31 PM
So its based just on them seeing your LSAT score? Nothing else?

lcjjdnh
10-03-2007, 11:57 PM
RPI-Fan:

Good luck, I'll definitely be reading. As I mentioned in the other thread, I took the LSATs this June, but after thinking about it, I'm going to take a few years off before applying. Judging from the schools you are considering and the fee waivers you've been granted, we're in similar situations, so I'll be interested to see how things turn out.

RPI-Fan
10-04-2007, 12:04 AM
So its based just on them seeing your LSAT score? Nothing else?

As far as I know, yes. LSAC does have some other data of mine (undergrad school, unofficial GPA, major, etc.), but I suspect that law schools don't look at that.

From my readings, I get the impression that maybe 80% of law school admisions are based on "numbers" (LSAT and GPA). Of that estimated 80%, 75-90% is LSAT, the other 10-25% GPA. So basically, LSAT is very important in admissions (and in fact better predicts grades than any other factor for any other type of school, including GPA).

Note, I think that they only look at LSAT for the fee waivers. When it gets to the actual admission process, the "factor" breakdown is as described above.

RedKingGold
10-04-2007, 09:53 AM
As far as I know, yes. LSAC does have some other data of mine (undergrad school, unofficial GPA, major, etc.), but I suspect that law schools don't look at that.

From my readings, I get the impression that maybe 80% of law school admisions are based on "numbers" (LSAT and GPA). Of that estimated 80%, 75-90% is LSAT, the other 10-25% GPA. So basically, LSAT is very important in admissions (and in fact better predicts grades than any other factor for any other type of school, including GPA).

Note, I think that they only look at LSAT for the fee waivers. When it gets to the actual admission process, the "factor" breakdown is as described above.

Yes on admissions being pretty much wholly based on numbers. Unless you've won the Nobel Peace Prize or discovered a cure for AIDS, don't expect to get in based on extracurriculars.

With fee-waivers, you'd be surprised how many law schools are willing to waive their fees simply by asking. More prestigous schools will want to see numbers, but more applications is always a good thing for law schools (higher turn-down rate).

As I told you before, I'll be pulling for you down the stretch and following along, RPI!

Icy
10-04-2007, 10:15 AM
I'm not familiar with USA colleges admisions so i'm curious. What does that waiver fee mean? that they are offing you like a scholarship? it will be totally free for you to attend the school?

finketr
10-04-2007, 02:13 PM
So at this point I think my list is:

1) Yale
2) Harvard
3) Duke
4) Columbia
5) ???

Columbia would be ahead of Duke on my list except for the fact that I absolutely hate living in big cities. In fact, it should probably be lower on the list for this reason. But it isn't, for now. I suspect that will change once I get a better idea what is going on with the land-grant highly-ranked state schools.

More shortly, if anybody reads!...

cough...

harvard is only 3 miles from boston, ma.. that's a pretty big city.

RPI-Fan
10-04-2007, 05:11 PM
cough...

harvard is only 3 miles from boston, ma.. that's a pretty big city.

Right, but Boston is more tolerable than most for me for a variety of reasons and Harvard is, well, Harvard, so I'd make exception for that.

RPI-Fan
10-05-2007, 09:45 PM
Small update today...

LSAC received my 2nd letter of recommendation (but it is the one that I probably won't really use); my 3rd should be received next week and 4th the following week (I talked to my last recommender yesterday and he said he will send by a week from today).

I still need to write my personal statement and essay(s), but I have some ideas for these after speaking with a professor (the writer of my 4th recommendation). I'm hoping to get to that this weekend; said professor said he'd be happy to review the essays for me which I will certainly take him up on.

Also, received a fee waiver from _The_ University of Michigan Law School, so add another one to the list for applications. Michigan is cool because it's beautiful and nice location, and perhaps I'd be able to play club soccer there. I'd say they move into 4th on my list now, right behind The Duke University. Columbia now in 5th...

Barkeep49
10-06-2007, 07:03 AM
I'll be following along. I really need to get off my own butt and apply to grad school myself so this should be a good motivator to do so.

RPI-Fan
10-15-2007, 08:34 PM
Got a fee waiver from The Northwestern University today. So add that to the list of possible applications. My big city aversion has me not too keen on them, though. The University of Iowa has contacted me about three times, never offering a fee waiver, so I finally e-mailed them back inquiring about that possibility. They simply responded that fee waivers are only granted on a need-basis, so I will simply forget about them.

As far as document statuses -- I have all my transcripts in and processed, and all but one letter of recommendation in. The letters I have right now are two professional, one academic (and one professional one isn't particularly flattering). So I am waiting on my last academic one, which last I knew was getting sent out late last week. Need to talk to the professor about that, but before I do I want to show him a personal statement for review.

Speaking of which, once this week clears up a bit I need to write an initial draft of a personal statement. If all goes well, I will be submitting applications starting next week (week of October 22). :eek:

~rpi-fan

Barkeep49
10-15-2007, 08:37 PM
Northwestern is next to a big city. My brother also hates big cities but is planning on moving to Evanston after he graduates college because it has many of the big city pluses without many of the minuses and Evanston is less of a big city than say Ann Arbor, though of course Ann Arbor isn't right next to a major city.

RPI-Fan
10-15-2007, 08:59 PM
The hard thing for a place like Northwestern, NYU, Penn, Columbia is that they are roughly equal to Duke and Michigan. So it's hard for me to really see the advantages moving to a big city, which I may very well hate, when I have just as practical options in much more appealing places (Duke in particular because I could probably play hockey there...)

lcjjdnh
10-15-2007, 09:00 PM
Northwestern is next to a big city. My brother also hates big cities but is planning on moving to Evanston after he graduates college because it has many of the big city pluses without many of the minuses and Evanston is less of a big city than say Ann Arbor, though of course Ann Arbor isn't right next to a major city.

I may be wrong, but I think Northwestern Law School is actually in Chicago, not Evanston.

RPI-Fan
10-15-2007, 09:04 PM
Yep, I think NU is in some sort of Chicago campus (unfortunately).

RPI-Fan
10-23-2007, 11:55 PM
Well, I just submitted my Duke and Michigan applications. Duke says they will get back to me within a week of receiving my completed file (they allege this takes two to three weeks... that seems a bit long to me).

Thank you for your interest in Duke Law School! We have received your registration for our Priority Track application process. When your application becomes complete it will receive an immediate, comprehensive review and we will mail a response within seven days. Please remember that your application must be complete before we can begin the Priority Track review. A complete file includes your LSDAS Law School Report, two letters of recommendation, your resume, and a personal statement. We will request your LSDAS Law School Report soon after you submit your application, but it generally takes two to three weeks for us to receive the report in the mail from the Law School Admission Council. Your application fee will be waived automatically if you use the LSAC electronic application service; if you submit a paper application please include a copy of your Priority Track invitation letter in lieu of the fee.

...

I want to write an essay before I apply to Yale so that will hold off for now. Next up on the fee-waiver cash-in list are Vanderbilt, UVA, and UT-Austin. I'll hope to get to them this week, and then move on down the list as we go on.

Regardless, it looks like I'm WAY ahead of the curve with regard to these applications (see: http://www.deloggio.com/how&when/appflow.htm).

~rpi-fan

RPI-Fan
10-24-2007, 12:02 AM
Oh, oh I almost forgot. There is a (rather weak) grad school fair at RPI tomorrow, but THE University of Michigan will be there so of course I will be stopping in to talk with them.

RPI-Fan
10-25-2007, 04:54 PM
Harvard, Vanderbilt, and Berkley applications have been submitted. I have to send Texas and Stanford via USPS so that will wait until this weekend. I've figured out an outline for my Yale essay so hopefully that will go this weekend as well. Michigan was pretty weak at the grad school fair; lady did not demonstrate any interest in telling me about the school at all.

So, the next applications are Yale, Stanford, Texas (in that order). Then, more fee-waiver freebies... UCLA, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, Alabama, Illinois next up.

On my LSAC information page it says that Duke & Harvard have already had their law school report requests processed. If that means what I think it means, Duke has an obligation to get back to me within one week of when that stuff arrives in the mail, which should be early next week. So hopefully I'll hear from them by early November!

MrBug708
10-25-2007, 06:49 PM
RPI - Did you submit your tax information in to get the fee waivers?

RPI-Fan
10-25-2007, 09:11 PM
No I just got them from the LSAC Candidate Referal Service. Basically, you can allow LSAC to distribute your LSAT, GPA, and undergraduate major and places will solicit you with these fee waivers.

Barkeep49
10-26-2007, 11:11 AM
You mention sending Texas and Standford via USPS. How do you send the others?

RPI-Fan
10-26-2007, 11:18 AM
Electronically, through the LSAC website. It literally takes about 10-20 minutes at this point to do any new applications have them completely sent out.

RPI-Fan
10-28-2007, 10:43 PM
Applied to Wisconsin, UVA, Notre Dame, and Illinois tonight.

I need to do Texas via USPS and write a stupid essay for Alabama, then write a more important essay for Yale, mail in a certification letter for Stanford, and I am DONE (I already talked to the Dean of Students about the Stanford DOS certification).

In neater form, I need to:

-write essay for Alabama and submit electronically
-write essay for Yale and submit electronically
<del>-fill out Texas app and mail it in (already have it printed); Print out fee waiver e-mail and drop in envelope with rest of application</del>; buy extra stamp for overweight mail and drop in the mailbox
<del>-mail in Stanford certification letter (already have it printed)</del>
<del>-mail in Wisconsin certification letter (need to print)</del>

I hope to be able to do all these things from my office tomorrow. I'll be there from 10am-6pm so I think I have a good chance of wrapping them up.

So, most things are out of my hands at this point. It will be nice to cross those last 5 things off the list. Then the waiting game begins. Fortunately, I'm supposed to hear from Duke in short order (middle of November at the latest, I imagine). Hopefully others will follow soon after. I don't expect to hear from Yale, Harvard, or Stanford until March or so.

To anyone who has been through this: what kind of timeline did you have once you submitted all your applications?

RPI-Fan
10-28-2007, 10:47 PM
For record-keeping purposes, the final list of apps will be (unless I have a change of heart and decide to apply to UCLA, Temple, Columbia, or Northwestern; all of which would be free):

(in some rough order of preference...)

-Yale
-Stanford
-Harvard
-Duke
-Virginia
-Michigan
-Cal
-Cornell
-Vanderbilt
-Texas
-Illinois
-Notre Dame
-George Washington
-Wisconsin

RPI-Fan
11-02-2007, 11:55 AM
Updated the application list & tracker with Cornell & George Washington...

Have filled out completely applications for Georgetown and NYU, but no fee waivers as of right now so I'm probably not going to send those unless I get such a waiver.

Eaglesfan27
11-02-2007, 12:33 PM
I'm following along with interest as well, now. In your first post, you mentioned med school as a possibility after law school. I'm sure you probably know this, but that is becoming a more common choice and there are even a few combined JD/MD programs in the country. Also, about a half dozen of my classmates back in 96 already had their JD when they entered medical school with me, including 1 who is one of my best friends. Good luck!

RPI-Fan
11-02-2007, 03:22 PM
I'm following along with interest as well, now. In your first post, you mentioned med school as a possibility after law school. I'm sure you probably know this, but that is becoming a more common choice and there are even a few combined JD/MD programs in the country. Also, about a half dozen of my classmates back in 96 already had their JD when they entered medical school with me, including 1 who is one of my best friends. Good luck!

Don't want to do the joint degree because the application process for med school is SO much more intensive and I don't have any of the general requisites needed to start studying for the MCAT's. I'm sure I will go back to engineering school at some point so if I do I might be able to sneak in the chemistry/biology-type classes then so I am more ready for the MCAT's and the MD application process in general.

If I go back to school to get Master's in engineering it should only take me 1 year or so.

Thanks for the kind words!

RPI-Fan
11-02-2007, 03:56 PM
Wooooooooooo!

hxxp://www.termdictionary.com/downloads/audio/duke_is_duke.mp3

Not the worst way to start a weekend, eh? :cool:

RPI-Fan
11-15-2007, 06:48 PM
Officially got into the MA/JD joint degree program at Duke (via e-mail/web). Still no hard copies of anything from them, I'd anticipate it'll come sometime in the next two weeks. Other acceptances could start any time, but I'm not banking on anything until December. I really need to learn more about the joint degree program as I do not want to do it if I'd need to sacrifice my summers. You can make a lot of money in the summer and it is the best way to find your biglaw job for when you graduate.

My guess on who I'll hear from next: UT-Austin

RPI-Fan
11-15-2007, 06:49 PM
Oh, also, have an alumni interview for Northwestern in the city on the day before Thanksgiving. Will be interesting because I am really definitely interviewing them more than the other way around.

Izulde
11-16-2007, 08:36 AM
Congrats on your first acceptance! :)

Barkeep49
11-16-2007, 12:25 PM
Congrats indeed on your acceptance to a fine fine school.

RPI-Fan
11-16-2007, 12:32 PM
For the record (in case anyone desires to reference this in the future in similar endeavors to my own), I got into Duke's JD program on November 2. They then forwarded my app to the graduate school who let me into the MA/Economics program on November 15.

RPI-Fan
11-16-2007, 03:36 PM
Got the acceptance package in the mail today; nothing special.

RPI-Fan
12-08-2007, 10:42 AM
Some positive updates (though slightly outdated...).

Got in at Michigan and Vanderbilt on Monday. Both of their packages arrived a couple of days later -- Vandy's had some impressive material in it (a well-written guide to the school and Nashville, etc.). On Thursday, I got a (slightly unexpected, given the lack of a status checker update) to UT-Austin. There was no financial information included which I thought meant I wouldn't get any.

But, then, on Friday (one day later), I got another letter from them with a scholarship offer of $7,000 per year and in-state tuition. The $7k isn't a huge deal (though nice) but the in-state could be quite critical. That drops tuition from about $33k per year to $20k per year. So if you add the in-state and the money together it's about $20k per year, on an already relatively inexpensive law school (most schools, are over $35k or even $40k per year, compared to UT at $33k). This will certainly be something to mull over, but I still have 13 other schools to hear from (the majority of which could greatly affect my final decision).

~rpi-fan

MrBug708
12-08-2007, 11:08 AM
Must be nice Kyle..:)

RPI-Fan
12-08-2007, 11:30 AM
Must be nice Kyle..:)

The early part of the "cycle" (as they call it) is the easiest -- rejections/waitlists don't start coming out until the new year, and even then typically not until March. :)

Thanks for the note, though.

Barkeep49
12-09-2007, 04:08 PM
Well even if/when the rejections start coming at least you've got in to some well regarded schools and even have an attractive aid package at one. I'd say you've done quite well for yourself. Congrats!

MalcPow
12-14-2007, 01:21 PM
Just found this thread... good luck, I went through this process a few years ago and ended up deferring and then falling into a good new job (and now will probably just go to b-school). You should feel great about having these early acceptances in the bag, makes everything much easier. If you end up getting into/visiting Harvard, let me know. My wife is a 3L there and very involved, I'm sure she'd be happy to answer any questions you had.

RPI-Fan
12-14-2007, 02:21 PM
Just found this thread... good luck, I went through this process a few years ago and ended up deferring and then falling into a good new job (and now will probably just go to b-school). You should feel great about having these early acceptances in the bag, makes everything much easier. If you end up getting into/visiting Harvard, let me know. My wife is a 3L there and very involved, I'm sure she'd be happy to answer any questions you had.

So, uh, can she pull strings in the admissions office? :p

RPI-Fan
12-15-2007, 03:02 PM
In at Notre Dame with a 40% tuition scholarship (basically unconditional). Excited to get in with a sizable scholarship, but as much as I LOVE Notre Dame, its tradition, and most of all alumni network, I would need basically a free ride to convince me to go there I think. Certainly will be another to keep in mind. But in the end, hard to imagine passing up UT's ~$14k tuition (after scholly) for ND's $20k tuition (after scholly).

RPI-Fan
12-17-2007, 09:45 PM
In at Illinois with a 75% scholarship (basically unconditional). Not really under consideration. The only decision I really somewhat anticipate in the next week or two MIGHT be Cornell but if that's not certain to come. Aside from that, it'll be a month or two before I really get any news again (and at that point, it's going to be the rejections from YLS, HLS, SLS, etc.)...

finketr
12-20-2007, 09:57 AM
let me know if you go to champaign.

RPI-Fan
12-21-2007, 04:14 PM
In at NYU! :)

RPI-Fan
12-24-2007, 02:27 PM
In at Cornell! Last one for a while, I think...

Izulde
12-24-2007, 03:30 PM
Congrats on the most recent string of acceptances! :)

molson
12-24-2007, 03:34 PM
Great news - there's really nothing in life like the excitement of waiting for the mail every day, looking forward to the next acceptance.

RPI-Fan
12-24-2007, 09:16 PM
Great news - there's really nothing in life like the excitement of waiting for the mail every day, looking forward to the next acceptance.

Thanks! Where did you go, if I may ask? Actually, I really, really wanted to go to UIdaho just for its location -- I guess Cornell comes the closest to matching it (but is still way off) -- but practical considerations ruled out that idea.

When I got the mail today (I've been getting it everyday for the past month or so, of course), there was no big packages. I saw the letter from Cornell and it was a razor-thin envelope, so with this being the very last day to hear from them about Early Action I was thinking it was a deferral. Alas, it turned out to be an acceptance with an offer to apply for a Dean's scholarship. If I somehow managed to trick them into giving me that scholarship CU would be awfully hard to pass up.

sooner333
12-25-2007, 12:03 AM
Congrats on all of the acceptances! I'm currently a 1L and am enjoying the time off for the holidays. Unfortunately I didn't do all of the early work you did because I was working on a campaign job then was wondering if I wanted to take some time off before school. By the time I decided to go to law school and get my stuff all together it was much later than this point last year. However, I'm happy at OU (in-state w/ a partial scholarship) and probably would have been here regardless of when I applied...although UNLV's full scholarship was pretty enticing. Reading this does make me wish I had made me get my act together earlier just to see what would have been out there.

Good luck with the rest of your apps...I'll certainly be following along.

molson
12-25-2007, 12:56 AM
Thanks! Where did you go, if I may ask? Actually, I really, really wanted to go to UIdaho just for its location -- I guess Cornell comes the closest to matching it (but is still way off) -- but practical considerations ruled out that idea.



I ended up at the University of Oregon - loved the area and the law building was brand new. It's a regional school, but the northwest is a region with a very good legal job market compared to the rest of the country. I've worked in Alaska in the past and feel like that'll be my permanent destination, and the law schools most represented up there are U of O and Washington.

RPI-Fan
12-25-2007, 09:45 AM
I ended up at the University of Oregon - loved the area and the law building was brand new. It's a regional school, but the northwest is a region with a very good legal job market compared to the rest of the country. I've worked in Alaska in the past and feel like that'll be my permanent destination, and the law schools most represented up there are U of O and Washington.

That's so cool! Alaska and rural Pacific NW in general is kind of my "dream place" to work & live! I guess most of my places probably don't rule that out, and the reason there aren't more east coast grads up there is self-selection.

I've heard what you say about Oregon is true -- little competition for a pretty sizable (and nice, in general) legal market.

RPI-Fan
12-25-2007, 09:52 AM
Congrats on all of the acceptances! I'm currently a 1L and am enjoying the time off for the holidays. Unfortunately I didn't do all of the early work you did because I was working on a campaign job then was wondering if I wanted to take some time off before school. By the time I decided to go to law school and get my stuff all together it was much later than this point last year. However, I'm happy at OU (in-state w/ a partial scholarship) and probably would have been here regardless of when I applied...although UNLV's full scholarship was pretty enticing. Reading this does make me wish I had made me get my act together earlier just to see what would have been out there.

Good luck with the rest of your apps...I'll certainly be following along.

Thanks for the kind words! Always like hearing other peoples' perspectives, especially when they've made the same type of decisions I'm faced with!

I'm proud of myself for being pretty organized with this whole process. I had only whimsically thought about going to law school prior to last Christmas-time. But, this girl I really really liked broke up with me and I was kind of desolate and just decided that I was going to buckle down and do it. Sounds like a recipe for a bad decision, but I'm so happy now that I am going and am convinced it is the right thing to do.

Graduating a semester late really helped me, I think; I had an easy semester this go-around making the application process not too difficult (and allowing me to send them all out early, which is huge!), I got additional good work experience and a great LOR out of my job this summer, and was able to take the June LSAT, which let me know where I've stood for quite some time.

I have thought about re-taking in February to see if I could get the few points that might make Stanford more realistic for me. I'll really have nothing to lose as they'll be (basically) the only one I'm waiting on at that point. However, I'm afraid I'll get dinged before then and sitting for the test will be worthless. I suppose that scoring well couldn't hurt me in trying to argue for scholarship money. The deadline is January 2, but as I write this I don't want to leave any stone unturned. So far, I really have no regrets about this process; if I don't re-take that might me something I could lament, which I don't want at all.

RPI-Fan
01-28-2008, 11:14 PM
Quick update:

1) I am re-taking the LSAT on Saturday for shits-and-giggles to see if I can't pull a miracle score out of nowhere... haven't done much studying whatsoever. On the couple practice tests I did, I was doing a bit better on Logical Reasoning, but bad on Games. Alas, maybe I'll pick up some easy games (the games I was doing were from when they were harder, I believe).
2) More acceptances: not sure where I left off, but, in at NYU, UVA (current #1), Penn, Wisconsin.
2a) Waitlisted at Northwestern -- a bit surprising as I have pretty good (in my opinion) work experience, but it's all while I've been pursuing undergrad studies (even though ~1 year of it is completely full-time 8-5 professional job). Alas, not particularly disappointed -- can't imagine any way I would've gone there over UVA/Michigan (other than a full scholarship, which wouldn't have happened anyways...)
3) Going to visit UVA at some point in February and March. Have been in contact with the hockey coach about playing hockey there and it looks pretty good in that regard.
4) Waiting for the thin envelope from Stanford & Harvard so I can really make my mind up on UVA...

Izulde
01-28-2008, 11:19 PM
Congratulations on the UVA acceptance! :)

digamma
01-28-2008, 11:23 PM
Woot! Congrats on UVA! You would be the third FOFC'er (that I know of) to be a Law Hoo!

Barkeep49
01-29-2008, 07:13 AM
What has made UVA your #1?

MalcPow
01-29-2008, 09:00 AM
Congrats, more great news. You've got so many good options you should really start thinking seriously about where you might want to be post-graduation (if location is important to you). Different schools naturally feed into different markets, and if that's not where you want to be you might have to work a little harder to get the opportunities you're looking for geographically. Most of your classmates at UVA are going to feed into DC or NY, and if you do well you'll have great clerkship opportunities to boot. At the same time, if you know you want to be in New York and NYU is giving you some money or something, you should probably go there, even over a Harvard.

It sounds like you're stoked about UVA and you should be, it's an awesome school. I'll just chime in as the wet blanket and say it's really critical to take a step back and remove yourself from the "application process" before making a decision. I've seen it play out with my wife, myself, and a bunch of friends, and it's very easy to get caught up in the abstract game of rankings and name reputations and a lot of nebulous fluff and end up making a bad value decision. You've got enough options that you should step out of the applicant mindset and evaluate these places as institutions you are hiring to prepare you for where you want to be three years from now (and beyond obviously) and show you a decent time in between. There's a sort of euphoric "I got into X awesome school" that can really cloud that stuff so it's good to put a check on yourself.

Congrats again though, you can't mess this up that much with those options. :)

Honolulu_Blue
01-29-2008, 10:56 AM
Great stuff here, RPI.

I'm glad I caught this thread out of the corner of my eye while on the "Main Forums" page.

Congrats on all the acceptances. That's a hell of an accomplishment. Your level of organization is fantastic.

Based on the schools you've already been accepted to, it will really come down to where you want to live and, to a lesser extent, where you may see yourself working in the future. (I just read MalcPow's post above and he summed all that up quite well).

You have a ton of options, which is awesome.

In the end, of course, you should go to Michigan. :)

Great school, great small, college town, great college hockey, great college sports in general. Just think how much fun it will be to be in Ann Arbor for the first three years of the Coach Rod Era!

RPI-Fan
01-29-2008, 07:38 PM
Thanks all the very kind and generous comments.

Regarding what MalcPow has said, I think I've done a good job already of evaluating things from different perspectives. After all, if I really was caught up in the whirlwind of rankings and reputation, wouldn't I be dead-set on NYU even though I know I won't like the campus? One of the reasons UVA is a high choice for me is because I'll be able to play club hockey there.

UT would be my dream place to be, but that is a significant drop in prestige and would affect, in my estimation, job prospects in a manner that I'm not prepared to accept. If UT decides to give me more money (in other words, a full ride), I'll have a VERY tough decision as I won't need to hedge against not doing as well in law school as I hope. But, I think that UT is unlikely to offer any more money.

There are really the only two foreseeable things that could knock me off of UVA as of right now -- more money at UT, or an acceptance to Harvard/Stanford. UVA just has the right combination of rankings/prestige, LOCATION (this is huge), and student body makeup (not particularly diverse, which I'm actually a fan of... sue me).

MalcPow
01-30-2008, 10:29 AM
Cool beans man, keep us posted. I didn't mean to sound condescending on anything, just trying to share some experience.

Are you thinking you want to pursue a big firm corporate job?

RPI-Fan
01-30-2008, 07:55 PM
Cool beans man, keep us posted. I didn't mean to sound condescending on anything, just trying to share some experience.

Are you thinking you want to pursue a big firm corporate job?

Short answer: yes. I like high-pressure situations where you have to work hard, so I don't see why I wouldn't want that type of job, especially with the pay they offer.

MalcPow
01-31-2008, 09:59 AM
Short answer: yes. I like high-pressure situations where you have to work hard, so I don't see why I wouldn't want that type of job, especially with the pay they offer.

http://img520.imageshack.us/img520/7899/blackberryhr1.png (http://imageshack.us)

Do you have a significant other? :)

RPI-Fan
02-02-2008, 02:48 PM
Just got back from the LSAT.

My predicted score range: 166 - 176 (most likely near the lower end of that range). For posterity's sake, here's what my min & max wrong predictions are:

LG: 0/2
LR1: 2/4
RC: 1/3
LR2: 2/5
Total: 5/14

RPI-Fan
04-18-2008, 10:56 PM
Sorry for the long delay. Quick update is that I'm going to UVA. Got dinged at Yale and Stanford (those stung), waitlisted at Cal and Northwestern (didn't care about those), and was (and still am) deferred at Harvard. Sent Harvard a letter saying I'll go if you call, up to and including the first day of classes, but I'm 100% making my plans on that not happening. If it comes up I'll figure things out on the fly. As I said though that's a virtual impossibility so just ignoring that factor.

Cornell made me a very good scholarship offer, but I wanted a change of pace that they couldn't offer. UT's offer wasn't very flattering and I was downright turned off by a number of things there when I visited the school. For some reason I never got all that high on Duke. Didn't visit there. When I visited UVA I was super sick and wasn't blown away, but comparing it to my UT visit (where I was in a great mood and desperately wanted to love it but really did not like it) it is a really awesome place that isn't missing much at all. I'll be able to play hockey there so I won't feel like I'm leaving something on the table in that regard.

I got into NYU but never ended up seriously considering it because I just know how much I hate NYC. It's too bad because it's so highly regarded but alas I know I'm putting myself in a better position to succeed at UVA with some scholarship money (NYU would have undoubtedly cost the "sticker price") than at NYU.

Perhaps a further update later if anyone is still following...

Oh, I also took the February LSAT and absolutely bombed. Didn't feel great walking out, but definitely thought it was a realistic possibility I could have improved my score from the first time. Alas, that couldn't have been further from the truth.

Izulde
04-18-2008, 11:46 PM
Congratulations on all your success and I'm sure you'll love UVA! :)

molson
04-19-2008, 04:30 PM
Charlottesville is a great town, I'm sure you're like it.

Remember to balance your life down there - I have a co-worker that went to Cornell that is jealous of my past exploits at Oregon (She spent a little TOO much time in the library). At the end of the day, we have the same job, so I clearly came out ahead.

MalcPow
04-19-2008, 04:36 PM
Congrats man! Not to toot your horn here, but you really rocked this process. Good luck at UVA!

digamma
04-19-2008, 05:26 PM
Sweet...welcome to the UVA Law Hoos contingent.

lcjjdnh
06-11-2008, 09:46 PM
Bit late on this, but congrats on the final decision. As I mentioned earlier in thread, I'm considering law school. I'll likely start my own thread this summer about the application process. Perhaps I'll start some time soon with my reviews of all the schools.

Mountain
06-12-2008, 07:03 AM
iFirst of all congratulations on getting offers from so many fine law schools you must be an exceptional student in order to have received so much attention. The tier one law schools UVA, Duke, Stanford, Yale, Havard, N.Y.U. are extremely helpful if not almost necessary to getting into the large law firms that pay starting associates in the $150,000 range a year to start. But remember what your quality of life is going to be like at those firms as an associate.

Most will have anywhere from a 2,000 to 2,400 billable hours per year requirement to keep your job and stay on partnership track To accomplish that you will have to work 55-65 hours per week. If you go to a school in the second tier say Georgia, Florida, Wisonsin, Notre Dame .... you can still obtain the types of jobs available for the first tier students as long as you're in the top 10-15% percent of your class and you could get a free ride. If you don't want to be in the big law firm/corporate life then you really don't need to attend a top tier school anyway. And from your offers its not like you're droopping from UVA to an one of those unaccredited law schools that try to recruit everybody they can. Every other type of job in the legal profession you can get without having to go to tier one. Just a thought from a lawyer who went to Univeristy of South Carolina and saw several of my classmates getting offers from Wall Street firms anyway.