- Sat Apr 20, 2019 7:45 am
#64292
To preface this, I have read the "The June LSAT and the Law School Waitlist" post and found it quite informative, but I do have a couple questions specific to my situation. I'll try to keep it as short as possible to save everyone's time, but I do think the details are quite important.
I have been waitlisted at a number of schools between 4 and 14 in the USNWR rankings (and have yet to hear from 2) with an LSAT of 171 and GPA between 25th and 50th percentile at most of those schools. The weakest part of my application is likely a poor senior year of college ('17-'18). I medically withdrew from the fall semester, and though I did graduate on time the following spring, I was still dealing with the issue from the previous semester. Thus, I took online classes and earned a significantly lower gpa than my cumulative. I wrote an addendum explaining that year in detail and describing why it will not be an issue moving forward, but am afraid it may not have helped very much, especially considering the slight stigma in the legal community associated with my particular medical issue. Also during that time I applied to all of the same schools as I did this year, plus one just outside the T14. I was waitlisted and did not end up hearing from any of the T14 schools, though I was admitted to the one just outside T14. I paid the seat deposit but ended up withdrawing late in the summer. Since then, I have been employed in two part-time jobs, both college degree required but not really in my field of study or viable as long term career options. I applied in February of this year to put as much time as possible between my application and health issues.
Considering those circumstances, especially that the LSAT is already the strongest part of my application and at or above the 75th percentile for most of those schools, would an improved score still increase my chances of admission from the waitlist? Is there anything else I could do to increase my chances this year? Would another year off be particularly beneficial (I could look for more stable employment, though my undergrad degree isn't well suited to finding a career-type job right out of college, or I could apply to a one-year MBA program at a regional school)? Or, is getting into a T14 school just not in the cards for me?
My LSAT score is from just before my medical issues began, if that makes any difference.
I have been waitlisted at a number of schools between 4 and 14 in the USNWR rankings (and have yet to hear from 2) with an LSAT of 171 and GPA between 25th and 50th percentile at most of those schools. The weakest part of my application is likely a poor senior year of college ('17-'18). I medically withdrew from the fall semester, and though I did graduate on time the following spring, I was still dealing with the issue from the previous semester. Thus, I took online classes and earned a significantly lower gpa than my cumulative. I wrote an addendum explaining that year in detail and describing why it will not be an issue moving forward, but am afraid it may not have helped very much, especially considering the slight stigma in the legal community associated with my particular medical issue. Also during that time I applied to all of the same schools as I did this year, plus one just outside the T14. I was waitlisted and did not end up hearing from any of the T14 schools, though I was admitted to the one just outside T14. I paid the seat deposit but ended up withdrawing late in the summer. Since then, I have been employed in two part-time jobs, both college degree required but not really in my field of study or viable as long term career options. I applied in February of this year to put as much time as possible between my application and health issues.
Considering those circumstances, especially that the LSAT is already the strongest part of my application and at or above the 75th percentile for most of those schools, would an improved score still increase my chances of admission from the waitlist? Is there anything else I could do to increase my chances this year? Would another year off be particularly beneficial (I could look for more stable employment, though my undergrad degree isn't well suited to finding a career-type job right out of college, or I could apply to a one-year MBA program at a regional school)? Or, is getting into a T14 school just not in the cards for me?
My LSAT score is from just before my medical issues began, if that makes any difference.