- Wed Sep 28, 2016 8:55 am
#29151
I graduated from undergrad 11 years ago. I went for my first jog in about two months because I was singularly focused on preparing for the LSAT and I pulled out my back. I am old.
I have been in insurance for a decade, and am currently working at a brokerage firm specializing in large complex commercial risks. I plan on staying in this niche for the rest of my career. I applied to law school back in 2010 and decided against attending; at the time I was considering law school as more of a career change than a career supplement, and with the compressed economy I decided it was not a sound financial decision for me at that time.
Now that I'm further along in my career I feel now more than ever that going to law school will really help me solve my client's issues from a more holistic approach, and help my progression within my niche/small brokerage shop. Going to law school will not be a career change. I would be an insurance professional with a law degree.
I understand the LSAT to still be as big of a factor as it was 6 years ago when I took it last (I took the live classroom powerscore course to refresh my memory and it was terrific). My question is - as I wait for the September LSAT results, 1) how much can I deviate from a school's posted average LSAT in determining my chances of acceptance, given my story? 2) Do some (1-99%) part-time law school student story look something like mine? In other words, is my story as unique as I think it is and would therefore help bolster my chances if I score lower than I hoped or not really? 3) Does my undergrad record carry little weight now that I'm a decade+ removed from school (I was a two-sport D1 athlete that graduated with honors. I imagine that means little now though).
I apologize for the lack of brevity - this started off as a sentence or two about me being old and kind of got away from me.
Thank you for any input you can provide
I have been in insurance for a decade, and am currently working at a brokerage firm specializing in large complex commercial risks. I plan on staying in this niche for the rest of my career. I applied to law school back in 2010 and decided against attending; at the time I was considering law school as more of a career change than a career supplement, and with the compressed economy I decided it was not a sound financial decision for me at that time.
Now that I'm further along in my career I feel now more than ever that going to law school will really help me solve my client's issues from a more holistic approach, and help my progression within my niche/small brokerage shop. Going to law school will not be a career change. I would be an insurance professional with a law degree.
I understand the LSAT to still be as big of a factor as it was 6 years ago when I took it last (I took the live classroom powerscore course to refresh my memory and it was terrific). My question is - as I wait for the September LSAT results, 1) how much can I deviate from a school's posted average LSAT in determining my chances of acceptance, given my story? 2) Do some (1-99%) part-time law school student story look something like mine? In other words, is my story as unique as I think it is and would therefore help bolster my chances if I score lower than I hoped or not really? 3) Does my undergrad record carry little weight now that I'm a decade+ removed from school (I was a two-sport D1 athlete that graduated with honors. I imagine that means little now though).
I apologize for the lack of brevity - this started off as a sentence or two about me being old and kind of got away from me.
Thank you for any input you can provide