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Tag Archives: law school admissions
Law School Letter of Recommendation Writers are Wingmen
You’re at a bar and you have three options:
1) Go up to that cute guy/girl and tell them exactly how awesome you are.
2) Cry into your appletini because you’re too shy to approach a stranger (and if this applies to you, I assume you drink appletinis).
3) Send over a friend to talk you up.
No. 1 will result in you coming across as arrogant, and no. 2 will result in your appletini being watery and salty, neither of which will make it any better.
Read Entire Article…
May 16, 2013 - 6:51 pm - By Matt Shinners
Tags: law school, law school admissions, law school letters of recommendation, letters of recommendation
Photo By sammcox Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Tags: law school, law school admissions, law school letters of recommendation, letters of recommendation
Photo By sammcox Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Heed Caution When Scouring Law School Discussion Boards
Like most Blueprint LSAT Prep instructors, I did not originally sign up for the LSAT just for kicks or because I have a deep love of standardized testing. When I enrolled in my own Blueprint LSAT Prep class, I intended to apply to law school that fall.
In a turn of events that my students find appalling, I ended up getting a 178 LSAT score after taking a Blueprint LSAT Prep course — but decided not to apply to law school after all. But I’m not writing this post to brag about my LSAT score (or not primarily for that reason, anyway). Instead, having once been in your shoes, I want to discuss an ailment that afflicts some people who are applying to law school.
Let’s call it “forum frenzy.”
Perhaps you’ll recognize the symptoms.
Read Entire Article…
May 15, 2013 - 6:48 pm - By Laura Santoski
Tags: blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school, law school admissions, law school discussion, LSAT, LSAT logic games, lsat prep class, lsat score
Photo By mouton Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Tags: blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school, law school admissions, law school discussion, LSAT, LSAT logic games, lsat prep class, lsat score
Photo By mouton Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Your Law School Application Checklist in 19 Simple(?) Steps
Today on the LSAT blog: a guest post by Law School Expert Ann Levine, the former director of admissions for two ABA-approved law schools and the author of The Law School Admission Game: Play Like an Expert and The Law School Decision Game: A Playbook for Prospective Lawyers.
This law school application checklist is straight out of my new version of The Law School Admission Game, to be released in just a few weeks. References to chapters (below) are within the new book. I hope it’s helpful to those of you applying this fall for the Fall 2014 cycle (and beyond).
1. Register for CAS (Credential Assembly Service)
How?
Read Entire Article…
May 10, 2013 - 6:18 pm - By Contributing Writer
Tags: ann levine, law school, law school admissions, law school application, law school letters of recommendation, law school personal statement, Lawyer, lsac, LSAT, LSAT prep, lsat score
Photo By cdsessums Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Tags: ann levine, law school, law school admissions, law school application, law school letters of recommendation, law school personal statement, Lawyer, lsac, LSAT, LSAT prep, lsat score
Photo By cdsessums Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 Generic (CC BY-SA 2.0)
Logical Reasonings / 5.10.13
A) The World Trade Center is now the tallest building in the western hemisphere at the symbolic height of 1,776 feet tall. LA Times. B) Student loan debt is now over $1 trillion, and a major hindrance to economic growth … Read Entire Article…
May 10, 2013 - 2:05 pm - By Hank
Tags: law school, law school admissions, logical reasonings, LSAT, News
Tags: law school, law school admissions, logical reasonings, LSAT, News
Here are the Winners in Our Ann Levine Books Giveaway
Another week, another giveaway.
Today on the LSAT blog we’re giving away five free books by Law School Expert Ann Levine — two copies of The Law School Admission Game and three copies of The Law School Decision Game. If you read this LSAT blog post about the law school admissions books giveaway, you already know that you could have entered in many ways, either on the Blueprint LSAT Prep Facebook page, the Blueprint LSAT blog Twitter page, the Blueprint LSAT Prep Google+ page, or through an LSAT blog comment.
Without further ado, here are the winners of the Ann Levine books:
Read Entire Article…
Apr 26, 2013 - 6:33 pm - By Hank
Tags: ann levine, blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school, law school admissions, LSAT, LSAT prep
Photo By Nick Stone Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)
Tags: ann levine, blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school, law school admissions, LSAT, LSAT prep
Photo By Nick Stone Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)
Tips to Beef Up Your Law School Résumé Over the Summer
Today’s guest LSAT blog post is from Anna Ivey, founder of Ivey Consulting.
Are you staring at your résumé and experiencing a mild sense of panic wondering how you’re going to beef it up between now and the time you submit your law school applications this fall?
You may be tempted to sign up for a flurry of impressive-sounding activities, but remember that quality matters a whole lot more than quantity. Law school admissions officers know what résumé-padding looks like. In fact, they have a finely tuned antenna for that sort of thing. Any activity where you list your main contribution as “member” — i.e. just showing up — isn’t going to count for much.
Read Entire Article…
Apr 24, 2013 - 6:31 pm - By Contributing Writer
Tags: anna ivey, law school, law school admissions, law school application, law school resume, LSAT, LSAT blog
Photo By Eric McGregor Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)
Tags: anna ivey, law school, law school admissions, law school application, law school resume, LSAT, LSAT blog
Photo By Eric McGregor Attribution 2.0 Generic (CC BY 2.0)
Logical Reasonings / 4.22.13
A) These days, LSAT prep and law school admissions can be tough to juggle. Law Admissions Lowdown. B) If you’re worried about law school debt, just make sure you get hired by this law firm that’ll cover it. Business Insider. … Read Entire Article…
Apr 22, 2013 - 4:17 pm - By Hank
Tags: law, law firm, law school, law school admissions, law school debt, logical reasonings, LSAT, LSAT prep
Tags: law, law firm, law school, law school admissions, law school debt, logical reasonings, LSAT, LSAT prep
Law School Admissions Trend to Watch For: Lower Tuition
It was only a matter of time before a law school did it, and Arizona decided to be the trailblazer.
After years of falling application numbers, a law school finally cut its tuition.
Many law schools have frozen increases, and other have upped their scholarship offers, but no one has taken the step of lowering tuition — all in the face of far-above-inflation tuition raises over the past decade coupled with a decline in law school applicants.
At the University of Arizona, tuition will drop 11% in-state and 8% non-residents, bringing the tuition to $24,381 and $38,841, respectively. Completely reasonable.
Read Entire Article…
Apr 10, 2013 - 6:10 pm - By Matt Shinners
Tags: law, law school, law school admissions, law school applicant, law school application, law school tuition, law student, pre-law
Photo By bunchesandbits Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Tags: law, law school, law school admissions, law school applicant, law school application, law school tuition, law student, pre-law
Photo By bunchesandbits Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
5 Things Prospective Law Students Don’t Do, But Should
Today’s guest LSAT blog post is by Shawdi Vara, a former Blueprint LSAT Prep student who is currently attending UC-Davis Law School.
Here are the top five things I learned about applying to law school. Specifically, here are five things prospective law students don’t do, but absolutely should (there is some overlap between each, but that’s to be expected):
#1 Thing Prospective Law Students Don’t Do, But Should: Spend more time thinking about the law schools you would actually go to
So many of us just blanket apply. Don’t do that. Really think about what type of law you wanna do.
Read Entire Article…
Apr 9, 2013 - 6:23 pm - By Contributing Writer
Tags: 1L, 3L, blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school admissions, law school application, law student, LSAT blog, LSAT prep
Photo By an untrained eye Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
Tags: 1L, 3L, blueprint, blueprint lsat, blueprint lsat prep, law school admissions, law school application, law student, LSAT blog, LSAT prep
Photo By an untrained eye Attribution-NonCommercial 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC 2.0)
3 Keys to an Effective Law School Letter of Continued Interest
It’s a magical time of year in law school admissions. Acceptance letters (and, sadly, rejection letters) are rolling in. Seat deposit deadlines loom. And soon-to-be law students are looking for apartments for the upcoming school year (because dorms are for undergrads).
And you’re still waiting to hear if you can get in off of the waitlist of your top choice.
You’re in good company. Very few people will run the table with acceptances (or rejections). And a waitlist means that you applied intelligently — you hit a law school that might be interested in you, but you’re on the cusp. You weren’t overqualified, yet you weren’t underqualified, either. You threaded the needle. Good for you.
Read Entire Article…
Apr 2, 2013 - 6:34 pm - By Matt Shinners
Tags: law, law school, law school admissions, law students, letter of continued interest
Photo By sparkieblues Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Tags: law, law school, law school admissions, law students, letter of continued interest
Photo By sparkieblues Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)






