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TABLE OF CONTENTS

INTRODUCTION

  What Should I Study In College?
  Which Law Schools Are The Best?
  What Factors Do Law Schools Consider In Deciding Who Gets Admitted?
  What Is The LSAT All About? How Do I Register & When Do I Take It?
  What Is The Law School Data Assembly Service?
  When And Where Should I Apply To Law School?
  What Are The Keys To Success In Law School?

  CONCLUSION

  Appendix A: Law School Rankings
  Appendix B: LSAT Dates and LSDAS Information
  Appendix C: LSAT Preparation Courses
  Appendix D: Law School and Other Web Sites
  Appendix E: Bibliography
  Appendix F: Checklist For Law School Applications

 

INTRODUCTION

If you're thinking about going to law school, no doubt you have lots of questions.  Where can I get in?  How do I get in? How will I pay for it?  What's the LSAT all about?  Everyone, it seems, has answers.  Professors, pre-law advisors, friends, law school representatives, books, and the Web all offer well-meaning but sometimes conflicting or, worse yet, wrong information.  No one has all the answers, and I do not pretend to.

What I will do is provide answers to the questions most often asked by those who hope to someday be law students.  I'll also try to point you in the direction of more answers and additional information.  If you are serious about going to law school, though, you must understand this: getting into law school is a process, one that involves planning, persistence and patience.  What you learn here will help you create a plan and will tell you what you must do to carry the plan out.  The real work is up to you.

Ideally, the process starts at the beginning of your undergraduate career.  You should focus on building a well-rounded course of study and making good grades.  As you will see, getting into law school is, in large part, a numbers game.  One of the most important numbers is your undergraduate GPA.  If your GPA is weak, you are at a huge disadvantage.  In truth, a poor undergraduate GPA can be fatal to your law school hopes.

Work begins in earnest during your junior year, when you should start investigating law schools, register and study for the LSAT, and register with the Law School Data Assembly Service (LSDAS).  During the summer after your junior year, you take the LSAT.  In the fall of your senior year, you get and complete law school applications, arrange for letters of recommendation, apply for financial aid, and if necessary, retake the LSAT.  Once your applications are submitted, you must monitor them to make sure all the law schools get all your information.  Then the waiting begins.

By the spring of your senior year, if you've done everything right, you will have acceptance letters in hand, and then you can pick and choose.  To get to that point, though, your work is cut out for you.  We'll start at the beginning, and take it step by step.  Or, if you prefer, you can link to specific topics from the Table of Contents to find the answers that are most important to you.

 

QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS

What Should I Study In College?

There is no such thing as a "required" pre-law major.  Nor is there such a thing as a "preferred" pre-law major.  Students have been admitted to law schools majoring in everything from classical guitar to business finance to "prelaw studies".  Likewise, no particular major will best prepare you to take the LSAT.

When deciding what to study in college, you should have these goals in mind:  

 
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Look for a well-rounded basic studies program.  Law schools want students who have balanced undergraduate studies, with courses in language arts and communications, humanities, physical sciences, and social sciences.

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Take courses that will help you to prepare for the LSAT and that will help you once you get into law school.  Courses that emphasize logic, reasoning and analysis will help you prepare for the LSAT.  These same courses, as well as courses in legal research and writing, American government and politics, and substantive legal topics like property law, criminal law, civil litigation, business law, wills and trusts, and constitutional law will give you an advantage in law school.  For more information on undergraduate studies, check out the Undergraduate Legal Education Page.

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Above all, work hard and make good grades in all your undergraduate courses.  Obviously, law schools try to admit students who they feel will succeed.  Undergraduate grades are seen as a strong predictor of law school success.  Poor grades will keep you out of law school altogether; mediocre grades will significantly limit your choice of law schools.  Good grades give you the most options, and when you're trying to get into law school, options are the name of the game.

When you begin to investigate law schools, you may find that last year a particular law school admitted more English majors, or political science majors, or prelaw studies majors.  Don't place too much emphasis on this fact.  First of all, in any given year, some major is going to be first in numerical rank.  This year it might be business majors; next year it might be political science majors.  Second, as mentioned above, law schools don't prefer one major over another.  Finally, the undergraduate major is not a predictor of law school success.

One last thing that often gets overlooked.  You are more likely to study hard and make good grades in courses that interest you.  If you like photography, take some photography courses.  If chemistry is your thing, study chemistry.  College is a time for you to expand your horizons and have some fun.  Don't spend so much time worrying about taking only the "right" courses that you lose sight of why you're in college in the first place.

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Which Law Schools Are The Best?

This often-asked question misses the mark.  What you really want to know is what law schools are most likely to be best for you.  If you're interested in rankings of American law schools, take a look at Appendix AThis ranking is compiled from a variety of sources like U.S. News & World Report and Barron's.  Rankings of the "best" law schools are based on more-or-less objective criteria such as the size and quality of a school's faculty, the number of holdings in its library, and the quality of its physical facilities.  While they will never admit it, law schools, especially those ranked among the "best", consider the rankings to be important.

But what do rankings tell you?  That Harvard, Yale or Michigan are among the top law schools in the country?  Do you really need someone else to tell you that?  These rankings tell you nothing about your chances of getting into any particular law school.  Nor do they tell you about a school's classroom or clinical offerings, or the demographics of its student body, or the financial assistance available at the school.  If you want that information, and chances are you do, then you'll have to do some homework.

Is there an advantage in attending one of the "best" law schools?  Sure. Going to a top law school may give you access to teachers and extracurricular activities not available at other schools.  For example, the best law schools tend to have more clinical programs and law journals, which help to build an impressive resume.  The prestige of a top law school will also open doors to more career opportunities.  Big money law firms are anxious to court graduates of the best schools, and choice judicial clerkships are reserved for the best of the best.

A bit later, we'll talk about how to choose the law schools that are best for you.  For now, here's the bottom line on law schools.  Most law schools in this country are approved by the American Bar Association (ABA), which means that they meet ABA standards concerning faculty, facilities, and curriculum.  Though law schools are reluctant to admit it, ABA approval has resulted in a high degree of uniformity and standardization among law schools, especially in terms of curricula.  No matter where you go to law school, in your first year you will take courses in legal research and writing, torts, contracts, property, and perhaps constitutional law, criminal law, or civil procedure.  You will learn the same tort law principles at the University of Missouri as you will at Harvard University.

You certainly want to get into the best law school that you can.  If your undergraduate GPA is between 3.7 and 4.0, you're in the top 15 percent on the LSAT, you have strong recommendations, and you've got some other factors going for you, then go ahead and apply to one or two of the top law schools.  But don't put all your eggs in that basket.  Some of the best schools get ten applications for every spot in the entering class, and most of those applicants have credentials as good as yours.  Be safe rather than sorry, and apply to some schools where your chances of admission are greater.

Remember, the important thing is that you get into law school.  Most states require that you graduate from an ABA approved law school to sit for their bar exams.  But you don't get extra points on a bar exam for having graduated from a "top ten" law school, and the prestige of such a law school won't make the bar exam seem any easier.  If you get preoccupied with getting into the "best" law school, you may lose sight of your real goal.

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What Factors Do Law Schools Consider
In Deciding Who Gets Admitted?

The two factors that law schools weigh most heavily are your undergraduate GPA and your LSAT score.  Of the two, some schools more heavily emphasize your undergraduate grades, while others pay more attention to your LSAT score.  However, success in undergraduate school seems to translate to success in law school, because good study habits in one naturally carry over to the other.  Law schools may also consider other factors like essays, recommendations, law-related work experience, gender, race, and disability status.  Before talking about when and how law schools consider those other factors, though, you need to know something about how law schools make admissions decisions.

The Rolling Admission System

Most law schools use a rolling admissions system to fill each entering class.  This means that a school begins offering admission to applicants well before its application deadline has passed.  How is a school able to do this?  Actually, figuring out who to make offers to before a school knows how many applications it will receive is a remarkably straightforward process.  Every fall, each law school creates its own admission index, which is a number derived from a mathematical equation that combines the GPA, the LSAT, and a third constant.  This admission index is the "magic number" for the law school for that year.  If your index score is at or above the point where the law school has pegged its admission index, the school offers you admission.  If your index score is below that point, some schools will put you into a "wait-and-see" category; you may or may not get offered admission, depending on the strength of the remaining applicant pool.  Applicants whose index scores are below a certain cutoff point find letters of rejection waiting in the mail.

The trick for a law school, of course, is figuring out exactly where to peg its admission index.  Set the index too high, and the law school courts disaster.  The result may be too few offers, resulting in empty seats in the class.  Conversely, if the index is set too low, the school may find itself with too many students.  Law schools would rather have too many students than too few.  To make sure this happens, a school may set its admission index a bit on the low side at the beginning of an admission cycle.  As the admission process continues, the school will tweak its admission index up or down (most likely, up) to fine-tune the number of students it admits.  The thing to realize is that because any given school is likely to have a lower admission index early on, there may be some advantage to applying early.  Not a big advantage, mind you, but any legitimate advantage you can get is worth taking.

Other Factors

As you can tell from this discussion, most admission decisions are based on GPAs, LSATs, and little else.  So when do things like recommendations, essays, gender, race, and work experience get considered?  The answer is that all law schools actively recruit minorities and women, groups that have long been underrepresented in the legal community.  Being a member of one of these groups can only help, not hurt, your chances for law school admission.  Law schools also do their best to offer reasonable accommodations to applicants with disabilities.

Recommendations, essays, work experiences and the like tend to get used as "tiebreakers".  For example, the top law schools get far more applications than they have available spots.  Most of the applicants to these schools have very high GPAs and LSATs, so the schools must rely on the tiebreakers to distinguish one applicant from the next.  Other law schools may also look to these tiebreakers as they approach the end of an admission cycle, if they have many more applications than openings to fill.

This does not mean that you should ignore or downplay the significance of these other admissions factors.  If any part of your application is incomplete, a law school will not consider your application no matter how strong your GPA or LSAT.  A sloppy application will not create the kind of impression you want, especially if the admission decision comes down to a close call between you and another applicant with roughly equal qualifications.  It can be argued that law schools are interested in seeing just how well you are able to follow painstaking instructions and pay close attention to details.

In short, most law schools use an admission index based heavily upon GPA and LSAT scores to offer admissions in a rolling admission system.  Because law schools would rather have too many first year students than too few, the admission index may be set lower early in an admission cycle.  This means that there can be a slight advantage in applying to law schools early. Applicants to the top law schools have very high GPAs and LSAT scores, so other criteria must be used to distinguish one candidate from the next.  All law schools are actively seeking to improve diversity in their ranks, so women and minorities are encouraged to apply.

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What Is The LSAT All About?  How Do
I Register and When Do I Take It?

The Law School Admission Test, or LSAT, is a standardized test given four times a year at various locations around the country.  All ABA approved law schools require the LSAT for admission.  It is given by an organization called the Law School Admission Council (often referred to as Law Services).  Law Services claims that there is a positive correlation between LSAT scores and success as a first year law student.  In other words, according to Law Services, the better you do on the LSAT, the better you are likely to do in your first year of law school.  Whether this is true is debatable.  What is not debatable, though, is that law schools rely heavily on the LSAT in making admission decisions.

As is true with most standardized tests, horror stories about the LSAT are abundant.  Many students are scared silly over the prospect of having to take it. The LSAT is nothing more than a test.  True, it is an important test.  But if you understand something about it and you prepare for it, your anxiety level should decrease.

The LSAT is not designed to test your knowledge of the law or any other subject in particular.  Instead, it measures your reading comprehension, analytical skills, and reasoning skills.  The test consists of 101 questions.  It is divided into five 35-minute multiple choice sections, and a 30-minute essay to provide a writing sample.  Each section contains between 24 and 28 questions.  Of the five multiple choice sections, only four (two logical reasoning sections, one analytical reasoning section, and one reading comprehension section) actually count as part of your score.  The fifth section is used for administrative purposes only, but you have no way of telling, when you take the test, which four sections count and which one does not.  The essay, which always comes last, is not graded and does not count toward your LSAT score.

Most students take the LSAT in June after their junior year of college.  The June test is given on a Monday; the other three test dates are Saturdays in late September or early October, December, and February.  Appendix B contains information about this year's test dates, costs, and registration procedures.  The October test date is used by students who, for whatever reason, don't get around to taking the June test.  October is also popular with students who took the test in June but who were not happy with their scores, and want to retake it.  The December test  date has a couple of disadvantages.  First, it is close to the end of the fall semester when you are busy with other things.  Second, by December you should already have applied to law schools, and you must ask them to hold your application until your December test score is available.  The February test date is not very popular.  For students who hope to go to law school that same fall, it is usually a last-ditch hope to improve earlier poor LSAT scores.

LSAT Registration

You should register for the LSAT at least four to six weeks in advance of the scheduled test date.  There is no harm in registering early; late registrations must be accompanied by a late fee.  You should get a copy of Law Services' free, annual LSAT Registration and Information Book (the Information Book), which is published in February or March of each year.  The Information Book contains registration forms, as well as lots of information on registration, the LSAT, and applying to law schools.  To get your copy, contact Law Services directly, or ask your school's prelaw advisor if you can pick up a copy somewhere on campus.  In addition to registering by mail, you can register by phone, or at Law Services' web siteAppendix B lists contact information for Law Services.

Here are some of the things included on the LSAT registration:

 
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A four-digit personal identification number (PIN).  If you don't choose one, Law Services will assign one to you.  Keep your PIN in a safe place, because you will need it anytime you communicate with Law Services.

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Your mailing address.  The mailing address should be where you'll get your mail around six weeks after the test, since that is when Law Services will send you a report with your test score.

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The test center code.  Each testing location has a test center code, and you specify your first and second choices.  Pick the location that will be most convenient to you on the test date.

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Authorization to release information.  By checking this box, you authorize Law Services to release your score to your school's prelaw advisor.  You should do so, because you will want to work closely with your prelaw advisor during the law school application process.

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Law School Data Assembly Service (LSDAS) registration.  If you plan to apply to law schools within a year after you take the LSAT, then register for the LSDAS at the same time you register for the LSAT.  For more information on the LSDAS, see "What is the Law School Data Assembly Service?", below.

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Payment of fees and fee waivers.  Be sure that you pay all fees, including any late registration fee, at the time you register.  The Information Book explains fee waivers for students who can't afford to pay.  Be aware, though, that if you want to request a fee waiver, you must apply about ten weeks before the test date.  Information about current fees is contained in Appendix B.

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Special accommodations.  If you live in a remote location, observe a Saturday Sabbath, or have a disability that requires accommodation, Law Services will make special arrangements for you.  However, you must apply early to allow Law Services time to document your needs and to make the required arrangements.

Preparing for the LSAT

You must prepare for the LSAT, and you should do so under conditions that simulate the actual test.  Because the LSAT does not test "knowledge" like the tests you are used to taking, "cramming" for it is usually an ineffective technique.  Preparing for the LSAT means learning what the LSAT tests, and how it is tested.  The more time you give yourself to prepare, the less anxious you will be come test day.

Should you prepare on your own, or should you take an LSAT preparation course?  The answer depends on who you ask.  In general, a couple of factors should be considered.  If you have the self-discipline to set aside the needed time and do quality studying, there is nothing wrong with going it on your own.  However, if you have a hard time forcing yourself to turn off the TV, seclude yourself from friends, family, or roommates, and devote your full attention to regular preparation, then the discipline imposed by a preparation course is something you need.  In addition to your study habits, cost is another factor.  LSAT courses are not cheap.  The typical cost ranges from $300 to $1100 dollars.  Some of the better-known test preparation companies do offer scholarships for needy students.  Your prelaw advisor can give you information about some of the LSAT preparation courses.

If you plan to study on your own, you should start six to eight weeks before the test date.  LSAT study books are available in all the popular bookstores, or through Amazon.com and other Web booksellers.  Be sure to get a book that includes studying and test-taking tips, but what you're really after is the practice exams.  The more practice exams you can get your hands on, the better off you'll be. Most LSAT self-study books contain questions from actual LSATs given in previous years, along with guides to explain the right and wrong answers.  Your goal is to understand how the questions and answers are designed, and to get as comfortable as possible with them.  You can order copies of previously-given LSATs from Law Services.

You should set aside a certain amount of time each day or week to study.  If you can study at home, then study at home.  But if there are too many distractions there, then find a quiet place like the library where you can focus and concentrate.  The bulk of your study time should be spent reviewing and trying to understand the questions and answers.  In addition, you should take at least one full practice exam each week under simulated test conditions.  Score each exam after you take it and then spend extra time working on the areas where your scores are the weakest.  Track your progress from week to week so you can see your improvement.

LSAT preparation courses offer small group instruction from people who know a great deal about the LSAT and how to take it.  The two most widely known preparation courses are Kaplan and The Princeton ReviewBoth offer regularly scheduled courses that take place over several weeks prior to each LSAT date.  You get lots of test-taking information and lots of practice exams.  Throughout each course, computerized analyses show your strengths and weaknesses so you can concentrate your efforts in areas that need work.  Appendix C provides information about different LSAT preparation courses, and their costs.

Your LSAT Score

About six weeks after you take the LSAT, Law Services will send you a report with your score.  The report explains how to interpret your score, but in general, here's how it works.  You receive a "raw" score that is converted to a "scaled" score of between 120 and 180, depending on the difficulty of the LSAT you took.  Your scaled score is grouped into something called a "score band", which is a statistical grouping of your scaled score plus or minus three points with a 68% level of confidence.  This means, for example, that a person with a scaled score of 150 will score between 147 and 153 about 68% of the time.  Note that this score band is not an absolute predictor of what your LSAT score will be should you choose to take the test again.  It is simply a statistical ranking of your scaled score based upon probabilities compiled by Law Services.  Depending on the circumstances, you might do worse than three points lower, or better than three points higher.

The average LSAT scaled score is around 151, and more than 50% score between 145 and 159.  A scaled score of 160 to 165 puts you in very good company, and you are in an elite group with a scaled score of 166 or better.  Your scaled score will be ranked in a percentile, which is the percentage of test takers that you outscored.  For example, a 75th percentile score means that you outscored 75% of the test takers, and that 25% outscored you.  On the LSAT, a handful of correct answers can make a huge percentile difference.  The difference between the 50th percentile and the 75th percentile is around three questions per section; the difference between the 90th and the 95th percentiles is less than two questions per section.

If you get your LSAT score and you are disappointed with it, try not to get discouraged.  Think back on your test preparation and test taking techniques.  Perhaps you did not put enough quality effort into preparing.  You may have had a bad experience taking the test.  If you were sick, or you were distracted by personal problems, you may not have been able to give your best effort.  Of course, some people just tend to do poorly on standardized tests.

If you find fault with your studying or test taking methods, or you were having a bad day on the day of the test, retake it.  If your score is low but not a disaster, and if you are sure you gave it your best effort, then maybe you need to rethink your choices of law schools.  Remember, your goal is to get into law school.  Sure, you'd like to get into a great law school, but you must to be realistic about where your LSAT score can take you.  If you have to settle for what was initially your second, third or fourth choice of law schools, do it.  Once you get into an ABA-approved law school, then work hard and do what is expected of you.  You'll get a fine legal education.

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What Is The Law School
Data Assembly Service?

The Law School Data Assembly Service (LSDAS), operated by Law Services, is just what its name implies: a service that assembles your law school admission information, compiles a report about you, and forwards that report to each of the law schools where you apply.  Using the LSDAS is not optional.  If you want to attend an ABA-approved law school, you must register with the LSDAS and follow its procedures.

If you plan to apply to law schools within a year after taking the LSAT, then you should register for the LSDAS at the same time you register to take the LSAT.  On the LSAT registration form, you simply check the LSDAS box, list every undergraduate, graduate, and professional school you've attended, indicate how many law schools you plan to apply to (you don't have to name the law schools, just estimate the minimum number to which you think you'll apply) and pay the LSDAS registration fee.  LSDAS contact and registration information is provided in Appendix B.

If you're not sure when you will apply to law schools, or you just choose not to sign up for the LSDAS when you register for the LSAT, you can register for the LSDAS at any time.  A registration form is available in the Law Services' Information Book, or you can register by telephone or via the Law Services' web site.

Every undergraduate, graduate, and professional school you have attended must send directly to the LSDAS an official copy of your transcript.  You are responsible for requesting each transcript, and you can do so using index-sized postcards that are included with the LSDAS registration materials in the Information Book.  Unofficial copies of your transcript will not be accepted.  You should request your transcripts during the summer after your junior year of college.  If your GPA improves after the fall semester of your senior year, have your university registrar send an updated transcript to the LSDAS.  An new report will be prepared by the LSDAS and sent to the law schools where you've applied.

Once you have registered for the LSDAS, had your official transcripts sent, and taken the LSAT, the LSDAS compiles your Law School Master Report.  Your Master Report includes this information:  

 
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Your name and address;

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All of your undergraduate, graduate, and professional school grades compiled in tabular format by school and year;

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Photocopies of your official transcripts;

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Your most recent LSAT score, as well as up to 12 earlier LSAT scores;

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A photocopy of your most recent LSAT writing sample, and photocopies of up to two writing samples from earlier LSATs;

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A list of all law schools where you have previously been enrolled;

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Photocopies of special documents, like records and letters confirming your disability status, if applicable; and

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Your admission index number for the law schools where you've applied, if the law schools provide that information to the LSDAS and ask the LSDAS to make the calculation.

A copy of your Master Report will be sent to you.  Check it carefully to make sure it is complete and accurate.  Each of the law schools you apply to will contact the LSDAS and ask for a copy of your Master Report.  You are not required to send a copy of it along with your application.

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When and Where Should
I Apply To Law School?

During your junior year of college, you should begin investigating law schools.  The easiest place to start is on the Web.  Law school websites usually contain information about faculty, curriculum, clinical programs, law journals, facilities, and applications and admissions. Appendix D includes a listing of law schools' websites.  Some law schools allow you to download their application materials from their websites.  Others will send an application package to you on request.  You can buy law school application software packages on CD-ROM, or download them from the Web.  See Appendices B and EThese programs simplify the process of filling out numerous law school applications.

To compare different law schools, consult law school ranking and information guides.  You can find several in any bookstore, and there are also websites that contain such comparative information. Appendix D lists some of these websites. Appendix E is a bibliography of useful printed books and guides.

Don't overlook your college prelaw advisor.  This person usually has information from Law Services like the Information Book and other publications, and can answer questions about local law schools, their admission criteria, and their admission procedures.  You should also speak to friends, business associates, and others who have attended law school to get their input.  Choosing where to go to law school is an important decision that should be based upon more than your GPA and LSAT score.

You apply to law schools during the fall semester of your senior year.  Ideally, by that time you have registered with the LSDAS, arranged for your official transcripts to be sent, and taken (and made a good score on) the LSAT.  The only thing left to do, aside from completing the applications, is to arrange for letters of recommendation.

Most law schools require at least two letters of recommendation, and many put a cap on the number of letters they will accept on behalf of each applicant.  You should make arrangements for these letters early during the fall semester of your senior year, and anticipate that it will take four weeks for the letters to be written and sent.  Law schools vary in their recommendation letter formats.  Some provide preprinted forms to be filled out, while others have no required format at all.  Nearly all law schools want the letters of recommendation to be sent by the letter writers, or they take other steps to ensure that the letters are not tampered with by applicants.  Give careful thought to the people you ask to write letters of recommendation.  The rule of thumb is that a lukewarm or bad letter will hurt your chances more than a good letter will help.

Law schools want you to visit their campuses so you can see firsthand what they have to offer.  However, few law schools require a visit or an interview as part of the application process.  The number of applications each law school receives would make this too time consuming and cumbersome.  Generally, only the top law schools interview applicants, and even then, just a few are interviewed as a sort of "tie breaking" procedure.  If you have truly special circumstances that you want a law school to consider when reviewing your application, or if you have a disability and would like to find out about a law school's ability to accommodate you, you can certainly request an interview.  Policies are different from school to school, but most are willing to at least talk with you and learn about your situation.

Try to have your applications done and sent (via certified mail, return receipt requested) by early to mid-November.  That way, you avoid being distracted by late semester school activities.  In addition, getting your applications in early may give you the advantage of lower admission indexes.  Once your application at a law school is complete, the school will notify you, usually by letter or postcard.  If you think you have done everything you need to do, but a few weeks pass and you have not received that notification, contact the admissions office to confirm that your application materials have all been received.  Better to be safe than sorry.

Things to Consider

Deciding where you apply to law school can be one of the most difficult decisions you have to make.  Your undergraduate GPA and LSAT score may limit your choices, perhaps significantly.  Even so, there are more than 200 law schools in the United States, most of them ABA-approved, which means you have plenty from which to choose.  In addition to your GPA and LSAT score, here are a number of factors you may want to consider in deciding where to apply:
 
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Whether you can move to attend law school someplace other than where you now live;

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The overall cost of living and quality of life in the cities where you might apply;

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The availability of financial aid and work study programs;

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The quality of life at the different law schools themselves;

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The degree of competitiveness among students;

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The number of law journals, legal clinics, and other extracurricular activities available to supplement classroom experience;

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The quality of the faculty, including student-faculty ratios, and minority and female representation on the faculty;

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The diversity of the student population;

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The quality of the physical facilities, including the library, and access to facilities like courts; and

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Information about graduates, such as bar exam pass rates, and placement and starting salary information.


This listing is not exhaustive; there may be other issues that you want to check out.  The point is simply that your law school investigation process should be designed to answer the questions that are most important to you.  All of the above information is available somewhere.  You just have to dig until you find it.

Financial Aid

A few words about financial aid.  The good news is that there’s money out there to finance your legal education.  The bad news is, it’s often not free money.  That is, there are some scholarships and grants available, but the operative word is some.  If you need money to attend law school, you will probably have to borrow it.  Somewhere between 70% and 80% of all law school graduates have borrowed money to finance their education.

If you think financial aid is in your law school future, the best places to find out what’s available are the financial aid offices of the law schools where you’ve applied.  You should start the financial aid-seeking process there, in November or December of your senior year of college.  Do not wait until a law school has accepted you to begin doing the voluminous application paperwork.  There is only a limited amount of financial aid to go around; if your application gets in as the money supply is dwindling (or after it has dried up), you will have to look elsewhere.  The law schools will give you their deadlines for submitting financial aid applications.

Your college financial aid office will give you a copy of the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA).  This is one of the first applications you will want to complete.  It requires you to provide information directly from your tax returns, so get your previous year's tax returns done as soon as possible after January 1 of your senior year of college.  The FAFSA cannot be filed until after January 1.  Each law school where you have applied for admission will determine your eligibility for financial aid at that school.  Most student loans available through the government carry low interest rates, defer interest accrual until you graduate, and offer some flexibility in repayment options.

Some law schools offer a Loan Repayment Assistance Program (LRAP).  In exchange for agreeing to work after graduation in a public interest law field where your income does not exceed a certain level, the LRAP will make your loan payments for a certain period of time.  The place to find out about LRAP participation is the financial aid office of each law school where you have applied.

Student loans are also available from private lenders, but these loans are usually not as attractive as government loans.  In addition to less favorable terms, your ability to qualify for private loans depends on the strength of your credit.  The difference in cost between a low-interest, federally-subsidized loan that defers interest accrual and a loan you obtain in the open market at prevailing (or higher) interest rates can be significant.  As always, the bottom line is the bottom line: actively seek out the government-subsidized loans that offer the best deals.

There are lots of online resources that will explain the kinds of financial aid available, and help you find it.  One of the most comprehensive is students.gov, a Web site with a ton of information about colleges and financial aid.  The United States Department of Education Student Financial Assistance Web page is a great source of information, as is the FAFSA site.  Ditto the DOE online publication "Funding Your Education"You can order a free copy of the booklet, but be aware that it is updated each year. An online booklet called "The Student Guide" is published each year, and gives information about federal financial aid.  Information about federal student aid is available from other federal agencies, in addition to DOE.  Your state department of education can tell you about state funded scholarships, grants, and other financial assistance like state guaranteed student loansLots of privately maintained Web sites purport to offer information about financial aid; go to any search engine and do a search request for "college", "financial aid", or "scholarships" and you'll get more hits than you know what to do with.  But beware of Web sites that want you to pay for a subscription, or pay for a financial aid search.  Virtually all the information you find there can be found for free elsewhere.  If you are thinking about paying for a scholarship search service, read this first.

How Many Schools

How many law schools should you apply to?  The answer, once again, is: it depends.  Most students end up applying to between four and seven law schools.  The breakdown is usually something like this.  Apply to one of your “dream schools”.  This is a school where perhaps your numbers alone (GPA and LSAT score) make you a long-shot candidate, and you’re hoping that some of your other credentials will be used as a “tiebreaker” to get you in.  You should apply to two or more schools where your GPA and LSAT make you a solid candidate for admission.  Finally, include one or two “insurance schools”.  These are schools where nothing short of total destruction of the law school would keep you out.

In addition to the time involved in completing each law school’s application, cost can also be a limiting factor.  The typical application fee per law school is $50 or more.  When you add that to the costs for the LSDAS, the LSAT, test preparation materials, and miscellaneous expenses, the total cost just to get into law school can easily top $1,000.

Keep in mind that law schools require their applications to be typed.  There are software packages you can buy and services you can subscribe to that will help with this tedious work.  By all means, pay attention to the details.  Make sure that you provide all required information, in the format called for by the application.  As part of each application you must provide a personal essay.  Sometimes the topic is given; other times you can write about whatever you choose.  This essay is not the time for you to give a campaign speech for a directorship with the ACLU or the NRA.  Write something nice and non-controversial, and make sure you write it well.  Do not come in under any word or page minimums, or over any maximums.  A sloppy or incomplete application will be seen as indicating a sloppy or weak intellect.  Give yourself the best chance possible and take the time to do it right.

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What Are The Keys To
Success In Law School
?

If you have developed good studying and learning habits in college, these skills will carry over to law school.  But there are some other things you can do in college to increase your chances of law school success, and knowing what to expect in law school will help, too.

The standard first year law school curriculum includes a full year of property, contracts, torts, civil procedure, and legal research and writing.  Some schools may vary this slightly, for example, by deferring civil procedure to the second year, and substituting courses like criminal law or constitutional law.  Other standard law school courses are legal ethics, conflicts of law, estates, trusts and probate law, taxation, remedies, and evidence.  No matter where you attend law school, you can expect to find these courses as requirements.  Electives are usually available in things like advanced tax law, environmental law, domestic relations, commercial law and transactions, trial advocacy, appellate advocacy, and intellectual property, to name just a few.

The primary method used to teach in law school is called the Socratic method.  Cases are used to illustrate fundamental legal principles, and professors use the factual information from those cases to question students in class.  The purpose of this technique is to force students to use and develop their analytical skills.  Material is not spoon-fed to students in law school as it tends to be in college.  Depending on the professor, and the level of preparation (or lack thereof) by the students, the Socratic method can be brutal.  Students find themselves being grilled to the point of embarrassment over fact hypotheticals and issues of law they are ill-prepared to discuss.  Your only comfort comes from knowing that if you get nailed one day, someone else will get it tomorrow.

Student assessment is also different in law school.  In college, your grade depends on many things like assignments, quizzes, tests, and class attendance.  In law school, your entire grade for each class is often based on nothing more than a semester-end essay final exam.  The professor gives you two or three sets of hypothetical facts.  You must analyze those facts using rules of law you learned that semester, then state the legal conclusions you’ve reached, all in a well-presented, coherent essay.  Since you know so much is riding on each final, the pressure is really on.  If you’re having a bad day on the morning of the final, you can be in big trouble.

Finally, the attitude toward students is different between law school and college.  Colleges compete vigorously with one another for students.  They often take extreme steps to keep students enrolled and to keep them performing at a passing level.  Not so at most law schools.  Law school tends to be a “sink or swim” environment.  If you can do the work and survive, fine.  If not, that’s OK, too: you drop out, and the law school has plenty of people who want to take your place.  All in all, law school is a far more serious and stressful place than college.  If you doubt it, ask any first year law student.

There are things you can do in college to help yourself prepare for the law school experience.  For example, take as many law-related courses as you can.  Many colleges now offer undergraduate programs that teach the same subjects found in first year law school curricula.  Courses in real estate or property, contracts or business law, probate law, criminal law, and civil litigation and procedure are widely available.  Take any courses you can find in legal research, legal analysis, and legal writing. For more information about undergraduate studies, go to the Undergraduate Legal Education Page.

While it may not be pleasant, search out professors who employ the Socratic method, and who emphasize analytical and reasoning skills.  Do not shy away from professors who require you to write essays in examinations.  The legal principles you learn in these courses, together with the analytical and reasoning skills you develop, will give you a head start in law school.  And if you know how to do legal research and writing before you get to law school, you will have a huge advantage over your law school peers who lack that training.

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  CONCLUSION

Finally, understand this about law school.  Law school teaches you a little bit about the law.  Between what you learn in law school and what you pick up in a bar exam preparation course, you should know enough to pass the bar exam.  But that is not what law school is really trying to teach you.  As Professor Kingsfield used to say on The Paper Chase, law school teaches you how to “think like a lawyer.”  Some might argue that this is a bad thing.  The truth, however, is quite different.  Learning to think in this way is a remarkable skill.  Once developed, it can never be taken from you.  What you choose to do with that skill is up to you.  It can be used for great things, and it can also be used to destroy.  Law school cannot teach you that lesson, either.  That you must figure out on your own.

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Appendix A
Law School Rankings

This is a listing of the fifteen "best" law schools obtained by comparing a number of rankings.  Next to each school is listed its students' average LSAT/Undergraduate GPA, which are two of many subjective and objective factors used to determine rankings.  Because any two different rankings almost never agree on the exact order of the law schools, this listing is alphabetical instead of numerical.  Again, keep in mind that while many rankings agree that these law schools are among the best, the rankings are necessarily subjective.  

bullet

University of California, Berkeley – 165/3.72

bullet

University of California, Los Angeles – 164/3.63

bullet

University of Chicago – 169/3.67

bullet

Columbia University – 169/3.57

bullet

Duke University – 166/3.52

bullet

Harvard University – 170/3.83

bullet

University of Michigan – 166/3.54

bullet

University of Minnesota – 162/3.59

bullet

New York University – 168/3.64

bullet

Northwestern University – 166/3.52

bullet

University of Pennsylvania – 166/3.60

bullet

Stanford University – 167/3.71

bullet

University of Texas, Austin – 162/3.53

bullet

University of Virginia – 166/3.70

bullet

Yale University – 171/3.84

How tough is it to get into a law school like one of these?  In a recent admission cycle, the University of Virginia received 3,443 applications.  Twenty-eight percent (964) of the applicants were accepted, and of those who were accepted, 37% (357) attended.  Harvard received 5,813 applications, 15% (872) were accepted, and 65% (567) of those attended.  Numbers like these are the norm at top-tier law schools.  So if you apply, you'd better be the kind of person who handles rejection well.  Each year, the "best" law schools turn away thousands of applicants with stellar numerical credentials.  The good news is that these students get to pick and choose from a host of "lesser" law schools that eagerly offer them admission.

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Appendix B
Information on the LSAT and the
Law School Data Assembly Service

The LSAT

     2002-2003 Test Dates:
bullet

Monday, June 10, 2002

bullet

Saturday, October 5, 2002 (Thursday, October 7, 2002 for Saturday Sabbath observers)

bullet

Saturday, December 7, 2002 (Monday, December 9, 2002 for Saturday Sabbath observers)

bullet

Saturday, February 8, 2003 (Monday, February 10, 2003 for Saturday Sabbath observers)

2003-2004 Test Dates:
bullet

Monday, June 9, 2003

bullet

Saturday, October 4, 2003 (Wednesday, October 8, 2003 for Saturday Sabbath Observers)

bullet

Saturday, December 6, 2003 (Monday, December 8, 2003 for Saturday Sabbath observers)

bullet

Saturday, February 7, 2004 (Monday, February 9, 2004 for Saturday Sabbath observers)

The LSAT fee is $103.00 and the late registration fee is an additional $54.00.  You can register by regular mail, by phone (215-968-1001), or online through the Law Services' and Law School Admission Council's joint website.

Law School Data Assembly Service

You can register for the LSDAS at any time.  However, if you plan to apply to law schools within a year after taking the LSAT, then register for the LSAT and the LSDAS at the same time.  You can register by mail (Law School Data Assembly Services, Box 2000-M, Newtown, PA  18940-0993), by phone (215-968-1001), or online through the Law Services' and Law School Admission Council's joint website.

A one-year LSDAS registration costs $99.00.  This registration includes having your Law School Master Report, and up to three letters of recommendation, sent to one law school.  Reports for additional schools can be purchased at the time you register for the LSDAS at a cost of $10.00 each.  Reports for additional schools purchased after you register for the LSDAS cost $12.00 each.  You can renew your one-year LSDAS registration for $56.00.

LSAC and Law Services Website

The LSAC website (www.lsac.org) and Law Services website (www.lawservices.org) are actually the same website accessible via both URLs.  The site is a great resource for the want-to-be law student.  You will find information about the LSAT, the LSDAS, applying to law schools, and books and materials you can order online and offline.  For example, you can order LSAC's 2002 Edition Official Guide to ABA Law Schools for $24.00.  Also available are previously given LSATs for $8.00 each, or you can buy "TriplePrep Kits" of three LSATs for $17.00 each.  An interactive, multimedia CD called "LSACD-Computerized Law School Applications & The Official Guide to U.S. Law Schools" is available for $59.00. An Internet version of the same software, called "LSACD on the Web", can be purchased for $54.00.  This package contains information on more than 180 law schools, and you can apply via a computerized application process.  In short, this website is a "must visit" if you are serious about going to law school.

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Appendix C
LSAT Preparation Courses

There are many LSAT preparation courses on the market.  However, if you're going to invest the time and money in a course, your best bet is to stick with one of the major test preparation companies.  While pricey, they know a lot about the LSAT and how to prepare for and take it.  The bigger companies employ instructors who tend to be very experienced in teaching standardized test preparation skills and techniques.  Classes are typically small (anywhere from 5 to 15 students) so you can expect a good amount of individualized attention.  In other words, if you can afford it, you'll probably get your money's worth.  If you don't, the reputable companies offer some sort of guarantee which usually allows you to repeat the course for free, or at a reduced rate.

Kaplan

Kaplan
205 West Randolph, Ste. 300
Chicago, IL  60606
800-KAP-TEST
FAX: 312-606-8983

www.kaptest.com

Kaplan boasts that the median LSAT scores of its instructors is higher than that of Harvard Law School students, and says that its students improve their LSAT scores by an average of 7.2 points.  Day, evening, and weekend classes are available at more than 150 locations.  The Kaplan LSAT preparation course is $1099.00.  An online course is available for $499.00.  Private instruction is offered for $3,999.00 (35 hours) $2,999.00 (25 hours) or $1,999.00 (15 hours).  In addition, Kaplan offers what it calls "Law School Admissions Consulting" starting at $499.00.  Kaplan's website has class locations and schedules, information about recently-given LSATs, LSAT preparation products and services, and lots of useful materials about getting into law school.

Princeton Review

The Princeton Review
1220 South University, Ste. 209
Ann Arbor, MI  48104-2524
800-2-REVIEW
734-663-2163
FAX: 734-663-4049

www.review.com

The Princeton Review is the other major player in the test preparation market.  Course enrollments are guaranteed not to exceed 8 students.  The Princeton Review offers a standard classroom course, online courses, and individual and small-group tutoring options.  The Princeton Review LSAT preparation course is $1,049.00.  Individual tutoring costs $1,799.00 (18 hours) or $1,099.00 (10 hours).  An online course is available for $399.00, and the Live Online course costs $799.00.

The Princeton Review has a terrific website.  Here are some of its features:  

 
bullet

Information on recently-given LSATs;

bullet

Law school information, allowing you to search by school name, location, average LSAT, average GPA, average student age, or other student demographics;

bullet

Information on alternative careers for people with law degrees;

bullet

Information on what the LSAT tests, and how;

bullet

Financial aid and scholarship information;

bullet

A sample LSAT online; and

bullet

Law school and LSAT discussion groups.

This website is a "must visit", even if you're not interested in a Princeton Review LSAT preparation course.

LSAT Intensive Review

LSAT Intensive Review
University Station
P.O. Box 7555
Austin, TX  78713-7555
800-325-5728

www.prepmaster.com

Prepmaster offers intensive weekend test preparation seminars shortly before each LSAT date.  Unlike Kaplan and The Princeton Review, Prepmaster only does LSAT preparation.  Enrollment is limited to 10 to 20 students.  If you take the course and you're not happy with your score, you can repeat the course for free.  The classroom course costs $329.00.  A self-study course is available for $99.99, and you can buy both courses for $399.00.  Prepmaster's website includes online, interactive, sample LSAT questions with answers and explanations, and links to law school information.

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Appendix D
Law School and
Other Web Sites

Most of these links take you directly to the law school website.  A few of them take you to the University's home page, and you can navigate your way to the law school from there.

Law Schools

 University of Akron   
 University of Alabama  
 American University  
 Arizona State University  
 University of Arizona  
 University of Arkansas-Fayetteville
 University of Arkansas-Little Rock
 University of Baltimore  
 Baylor University   
 Boston College   
 Boston University   
 Brigham Young University 
 Brooklyn Law School  
 California Western Law School 
 University of California-Hastings 
 University of California-Berkeley 
 University of California-Davis 
 University of California-Los Angeles
 Campbell University  
 Capital University   
 Case Western Reserve University 
 Catholic University of America 
 University of Chicago  
 University of Cincinnati  
 City University of New York 
 Cleveland State University 
 University of Colorado  
 Columbia University   
 University of Connecticut  
 Cornell University   
 Creighton University  
 University of Dayton  
 University of Denver  
 DePaul University   
 
Detroit College of Law-MSU 
 
University of Detroit-Mercy 
 University of District of Columbia
 Drake University   
 Duke University   
 Duquesne University  
 Emory University   
 Florida State University  
 University of Florida  
 Fordham University  
 Franklin Pierce Law Center 
 George Mason University  
 George Washington University 
 Georgetown University  
 Georgia State University  
 University of Georgia  
 Golden Gate University  
 Gonzaga University  
 Hamline University  
 Harvard University   
 University of Hawaii-Manoa 
 Hofstra University   
 University of Houston  
 Howard University  
 University of Idaho  
 Illinois Tech-Chicago Kent 
 University of Illinois  
 Indiana University-Bloomington 
 Indiana University-Indianapolis 
 University of Iowa  
 John Marshall Law School 
 University of Kansas  
 University of Kentucky  
 Lewis and Clark College  
 Louisiana State University 
 University of Louisville  
 Loyola Marymount University 
 Loyola University-Chicago 
 Loyola University-New Orleans 
 Marquette University  
 University of Maryland  
 University of Memphis  
 Mercer University   
 University of Miami  
 
University of Michigan  
 University of Minnesota  
 Mississippi College  
 University of Mississippi  
 University of Missouri-Columbia 
 University of Missouri-Kansas City
 University of Montana  
 University of Nebraska-Lincoln 
 New England School of Law 
 University of New Mexico 
 New York Law School  
 New York University Law School
 North Carolina Central University
 Univ. North Carolina-Chapel Hill 
 University of North Dakota 
 Northeastern University  
 Northern Illinois University 
 Northern Kentucky University 
 Northwestern University  
 University of Notre Dame  
 Nova Southeastern University 
 Ohio Northern University  
 Ohio State University  
 Oklahoma City University 
 University of Oklahoma  
 University of Oregon  
 Pace University   
 University of the Pacific  
 Pennsylvania State University 
 University of Pennsylvania 
 Pepperdine University  
 University of Pittsburgh  
 Quinnipiac College  
 Regent University   
 University of Richmond  
 Roger Williams University 
 Rutgers University, Camden 
 Rutgers University, Newark 
 Samford University  
 University of San Diego  
 University of San Francisco 
 Santa Clara University  
 Seattle University   
 Seton Hall University  
 University of South Carolina 
 University of South Dakota 
 University of Southern California 
 Southern Illinois University 
 University of Southern Maine 
 Southern Methodist University 
 Southern University  
 Southwestern University  
 St. John's University  
 St. Louis University  
 St. Mary's University  
 St. Thomas University  
 Stanford University  
 State Univ. New York-Buffalo 
 Stetson University   
 Suffolk University   
 Syracuse University  
 Temple University  
 University of Tennessee  
 Texas A&M University  
 Texas Southern University 
 Texas Tech University  
 Texas Wesleyan University 
 University of Texas, Austin 
 Thomas Jefferson School of Law 
 
Thomas M. Cooley Law School 
 University of Toledo  
 Touro College   
 Tulane University   
 Union University   
 University of Tulsa  
 University of Utah   
 Valparaiso University  
 Vanderbilt University  
 Vermont Law School  
 Villanova University  
 University of Virginia   
 Wake Forest University  
 Washburn University  
 Washington and Lee University 
 Washington University  
 University of Washington  
 
Wayne State University  
 West Virginia University  
 Western New England College 
 Whittier College   
 Widener University, Harrisburg PA
 Widener University, Wilmington, DE
 Willamette University  
 College of William and Mary 
 William Mitchell College of Law 
 University of Wisconsin  
 University of Wyoming  
 Yale University   
 Yeshiva University   

Other Web Sites

Check out these websites.  They all talk about law-related stuff, and many devote a lot of space to things like law schools, admissions, financial aid, legal careers, and the LSAT.

Access Group (financial aid information) 
American Bar Association (a site primarily for lawyers, but with a lot of information for prelaw and law students)
Boston College Online Law School Locator    (a great website that lets you find out how competitive your undergraduate GPA and LSAT score will be at different law schools)
FAFSA (Online Form)  
FAFSA (Instructions)  
Findlaw   (a mega index of legal materials with lots of information for prelaw and law students)
Internet Legal Resource Guide  (another great site with lots of information for prelaw and law students; see "Prelaw Student Services" below)
Law Preview   
Law School Admission Council 
Nat'l Assn. For Law Placement 
Nat’l Assn. of Prelaw Advisors 
National Law Journal  
Peterson’s Law Channel (law school  search by LSAT and other criteria)
Prelaw Student Services  (prelaw page for the Internet Legal Resource Guide, above)
University of Richmond Pre-Law Handbook  (terrific source of information for the want-to-be law student)

Council on Legal Education Opportunity (CLEO)(organization dedicated to improving legal education opportunities for groups historically underrepresented in the legal community)           

Guidelines for Writing the Law School Personal Statement

In addition, every year U.S. News & World Report does a ranking of law schools, and publishes that information along with other topics of interest to prelaw students.  The most recent ranking can be found hereIn addition to the rankings, you'll find a lot of useful information on individual schools.

Finally, if you want still more information, get on any search engine or directory and type in "law school".  You'll come up with more hits than you can possibly review.

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Appendix E
Bibliography

Stewart, Mark A., 30 Days to the LSAT, IDG Books Worldwide (Oct. 1997) (ISBN: 0028618351) 266 pgs., $11.95 retail

Morgan, Rick L., ed, ABA Guide to Approved Law Schools 2000, IDG Books Worldwide (Apr. 1999) (ISBN: 0028628241) 480 pgs., $21.95 retail

Stewart, Mark A., ARCO GRE/LSAT Logic Workbook, 3d ed, IDG Books Worldwide (June 1999) (ISBN: 0028632468) 186 pgs., $10.95 retail

Barron's Educational Series, Inc., ed, Barron's Guide to Law Schools, 13th ed, Barron's Educational Series (Oct. 1998) (ISBN: 0764104314) 420 pgs., $15.95 retail

Van Tuyl, Ian, The Best Law Schools, 2000 ed, Princeton Review (1999) (ISBN: 0375754644) 565 pgs., $20.00 retail (includes "Headstart 2000 Business and Law School Application Software" interactive CD-ROM, Windows compatible)

Deaver, Jeff, The Complete Law School Companion: How to Excel at America's Most Demanding Post-Graduate Curriculum, John Wiley & Sons (Mar. 1992) (ISBN: 047155491X) 240 pgs., $15.95 retail

Robinson, Adam, Cracking the LSAT, 2000 ed, Princeton Review (July 1999) (ISBN: 0375754105) 336 pgs., $34.95 retail (includes "Sample Tests on CD-ROM" interactive CD-ROM, Windows compatible)

Kaufman, Daniel, Essays That Will Get You Into Law School, Barron's Educational Series (Oct. 1998) (ISBN: 0764106120) 135 pgs., $10.95 retail

Curry, Boykin, ed, Essays That Worked for Law Schools: 35 Essays From Successful Applications to the Nation's Top Law Schools, Fawcett Books (Sept. 1991) (ISBN: 0449905152) $12.00 retail

Martinson, Thomas H., Getting Into Law School Today, 3d ed, IDG Books Worldwide (June 1998) (ISBN: 002862498X) 148 pgs., $12.95 retail

Castleman, Harry, Going to Law School?: Everything You Need to Know to Choose and Pursue a Degree in Law, John Wiley & Sons (Sept. 1997) (ISBN: 0471149071) 240 pgs., $14.95 retail

Lermack, Paul, Ph.D., How to Get Into the Right Law School, 2d ed, VGM Career Horizons (1997) (ISBN: 084424127X) 225 pgs., $14.95 retail

Kaplan, ed, Kaplan LSAT 1999-2000, Kaplan (Mar. 1999) (ISBN: 0684856700) 304 pgs., $34.95 retail (includes CD-ROM)

Lammert-Reeves, Ruth, Law School Admissions Adviser 2000: Selection, Admissions, Financial Aid, Kaplan (July 1999) (ISBN: 0684859580) 304 pgs., $24.95 retail

Kolby, Jeff, Master the LSAT, Nova Press (Jan. 1997) (ISBN: 1889057045) 560 pgs., $29.95 retail

Times Books, ed, The Official Guide to US Law Schools, 2000 ed, Times Books (June 1999) (ISBN: 0812990463) 448 pgs., $20.00 retail

Falcon, Atticus, Planet Law School: What You Need to Know (Before You Go)…but Didn't Know to Ask, Fine Print Press (May 1998) (ISBN: 1888960027) 404 pgs., $19.95 retail

Zavatta, Amy, ed, The Princeton Review Prelaw Companion, Princeton Review (Sept. 1996) (ISBN: 067977372X) $15.00 retail

Kaplan, ed, Two Real LSATs Explained, Simon & Schuster (Aug. 1997) (ISBN: 068481681) 368 pgs., $34.95 retail

Law School Admission Council, So You Want to Be A Lawyer: A Practical Guide to Law As A Career, Broadway Books (June 1998) (ISBN: 0767901606) 154 pgs., $13.00 retail

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Appendix F
Law School Application Checklist

This Checklist is intended to be a general list of the things you need to do, and when you need to do them, to apply to law schools.  It is not specific to any particular school, nor is it a "one-size-fits-all" guide.  The Checklist assumes you are a "conventional" student pursuing a four-year course of study.  Not all of the items will apply to everyone.  You should work closely with your prelaw advisor to develop a plan that suits your needs, and you must check with each law school where you're applying for that school's dates and deadlines.

JUNIOR YEAR

February

____ Request interviews at law schools you're interested in, if you need special accommodations for applications, admissions, or attendance
____ Request waiver of LSAT fees (those who qualify for waiver)
____ Request LSAT preparation course information

March

____ Request law school catalogs and admission information
____ Get Law Services Information Book from Law Services or prelaw advisor
____ Sign up for LSAT preparation course
____ Sign up for June LSAT and register with LSDAS (late March)

April

____ Sign up for June LSAT and register with LSDAS (if not done in March)
____ Begin LSAT preparation course OR
____ Get LSAT self-study materials and begin studying for LSAT

May

____ June LSAT admission ticket arrives; verify accuracy and correct errors with Law    Services
____ Continue LSAT prep course OR
____ Continue LSAT self-study

June

____ Take June LSAT 
____ Begin visiting law schools you're interested in

July

____ June LSAT score arrives; check accuracy
____ Finish visiting law schools
____ Make list of law schools you're applying to
____ Register with LSDAS (if not already done) OR
____ Order and pay for extra copies of Master Report if you need more (LSDAS)
____ Sign up for LSAT preparation course (if you're taking the October LSAT)

August

____ Order official transcripts from all undergraduate, graduate and professional schools; arrange to have sent directly to LSDAS
____ Get current application forms and materials for every law school you're applying to
____ Get current financial aid forms for every law school you're applying to
____ Sign up for October LSAT (if you missed June LSAT or are retaking the test)
____ Begin LSAT preparation course (for October LSAT) OR
____ Get LSAT self-study materials and begin LSAT self-study (for October LSAT)

SENIOR YEAR

September

____ Law School Master Report arrives; check for accuracy and correct errors with LSDAS
____ Make arrangements for letters of recommendation
____ Begin completing law school application forms, including essays
____ Continue LSAT preparation course (for October LSAT) OR
____ Continue LSAT self-study (for October LSAT)
____ October LSAT admission ticket arrives; verify accuracy and correct errors with Law Services
____ Make application deadline list for every law school you're applying to

October

____ Take October LSAT (if you didn't take June LSAT or want to retake)
____ Finalize law school applications and essays
____ Collect letters of recommendation or check to see that recommenders have finished and sent
____ Double-check all applications for completeness and accuracy
____ Mail law school applications (certified, return-receipt requested) unless waiting for October LSAT score
 

November

____ October LSAT score arrives; verify accuracy
____ Mail law school applications (certified, return receipt requested) if not done in October or if awaiting result of October LSAT
____ Law schools acknowledge applications (if mailed in October)
____ Confirm receipt of applications with law schools that haven't acknowledged

December

____ Order updated official college transcript, if needed
____ Law schools acknowledge applications (if mailed in November)
____ Confirm receipt of applications with law schools that haven't acknowledged

January

____ Complete and file previous year's tax returns

February

____ Complete and send financial aid applications (certified mail, return-receipt requested)
 
 
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©2002, 2001 Daniel R. Ray, J.D.