|
|||||||||
|
|
|||||||||
Guests include:
More Information on this Topic from our Sponsor
Support for Law School Podcaster comes from Accepted.com. For 15 years, Accepted has helped applicants like you gain acceptance to top law schools. Let Accepted assist you in creating your “killer law school application.” Browse our site to take advantage of free tips, advice, and resources, or work one-on-one with an experienced advisor who will help you prepare a winning personal statement for your dream program. Start your exploration at accepted.com/lawschoolpodcaster and then contact our experienced law school admissions advisors today to discuss your application.
Let us know you're a Law School Podcaster listener and we'll take $25 off your first purchase of Accepted’s law school admissions services. Visit accepted.com/lawschoolpodcaster today. Transcription: Welcome to Law
School Podcaster, your source for inside information and advice on the law
school application process. I’m Diana Jordan. To get into law school these days,
against increased competition, you need a “killer” application. This show is
entitled Creating the We will hear
encouraging words about the admissions process from Andy Cornblatt, Dean of
Admissions at Georgetown University Law Center. “The process is more complicated and more interesting,
and more importantly, more fair than simply, ‘tell me your GPA and your
LSAT and I’ll hand you your decision letter.’” And, we’ll hear what Assistant
Dean for Admissions at The University of Chicago Law School, Ann Perry wants to
see in an application. “It’s just taking
the time to do it to the best of their ability.” Paul Bodine is Senior Editor at Accepted.com
and author of Great Personal Statements
for Law School. Bodine says consultants can provide a discerning eye. “A
good consultant can help you kind of step back from your life experiences and
know what’s distinctive relative to other applicants.” We’ll hear how
important it is to inject your personalities and your passions into the
application from former Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid at the University
of Pennsylvania Law School and now Senior Law School Consultant for AdmissionsConsultants,
Derek Meeker. “It’s just about focusing
on what you have done and how that’s affected you and impacted you and shaped
or defined your goals and perspectives.” And, we’ll hear from a student who has
been through the application process, Mark Aziz at Each of these
five was asked for the top five tips for making an
application stand out from the rest of the pack. Here are the top five:
·
First,
start early and apply as soon as possible, following directions with no typos. ·
Second,
your personal statement should be well-written showing who your truly are,
expressing your passions in life. ·
Third,
prepare addenda for any special circumstances leaving no questions unanswered. ·
Fourth,
tailor your LSAT, GPA, and personal statements to each school, and ·
Fifth,
select recommenders who know you and who can speak wisely and well on your
behalf. Dean of
Admissions at Assistant Dean
for Admissions at The University of Chicago Law School, Ann Perry, what are
your top tips to making an application stand out from the rest of the pack?
“First off, make it your best piece of materials that you’re submitting.
Nothing is more grating to an admissions committee member than typos on
admissions material. My second tip is that you follow all of the directions to
the best of the applicant’s ability. I also think that making your points that
you want the committee to know about you via either your personal statement or
your letters of recommendations or your resume as clear as possible for the
committee members. You don’t want to have any questions left unanswered that
you’re going to have the admissions committee answer without all of the
information. And finally, I think the applicant needs to just realize that they
need patience in the admissions cycle, meaning that just when they turn in
their application, they are not going to get an answer within a week. They need
to give the schools time to review all of their applications as they are making
their decision.” Paul Bodine is
Senior Editor at Accepted.com and he is the author of Great Personal Statements for Law School. Paul, what are your top
tips? “Job one is to get the highest LSAT score that you can. Second, you need
to make sure that your GPA and your LSAT are appropriate for the schools that
you are applying to; standing out from the pack is pointless if you’re applying
to a program you aren’t competitive for. Third, you need to get a good
objective sense of what your profile strengths and weaknesses are. If you know
what aspects of your profile are most likely to interest the admissions committees,
then you need to make sure that your application highlights those strengths.
And by strengths, I mean skills such as research, writing or analytical skills
but also uniqueness factors such as an unusual international experience or
distinctive cultural or social background, unusual hobbies, life experiences,
that kind of thing. Regarding weaknesses, knowing what your weaknesses are will
enable you to spend some time repairing them before you actually apply but also
allow you to strategically compensate for or do damage control on them in the
application itself. Fourth, you can write a distinctive, compelling and
self-revealing personal statement and supplemental essays. And finally, you can
find recommenders you are sure will speak knowledgably and enthusiastically
about you. If you do all of those five things, I think you’ll be ahead of the
pack in terms of preparing for law school admission.” Former Dean of
Admissions and Financial Aid at the University of Pennsylvania Law School,
Derek Meeker, is now a Senior Law School Consultant for AdmissionsConsultants, Inc.
Derek, what advice do you have? “It’s for applicants to just be who they are.
That is, to be genuine and truthful and to present a very realistic picture of
what they have to offer. And the reason that I say that one first is because I
think that, what a lot of applicants try to do is, they try to figure out what
it is that the admissions committee wants to hear and they are too focused on
what they should be writing from the committee’s perspective as opposed to just
really looking inside themselves. It’s not necessarily about how can I be
unique or how can I stand out so much as just what am I going to bring to the
table?” What about
passion? “Passion; at the end of the day, law schools want people who are
passionate. And law schools don’t necessarily want to hear about experiences
that are legal or law related or even political or things like that. It’s not
about that. It’s just they have passion
about something. Doesn’t matter what the topic is, or what their experience has
been but whatever it is that gets them really excited and that they love doing
that is going to come through on the application. The last one is just the
writing. Writing is by far the most important skill that one uses and needs in
law school and as an attorney so just having very crisp, clear and obviously
grammatically correct writing in the application.” And we have
third year law student at The application
process provides several opportunities for the applicant to stand out by
presenting both an authentic and personal story of who they are and how they “fit”
at a particular school. Dean Cornblatt, what goals should an applicant keep in
mind to communicate to the admissions committee? “Someone who is on top of
their game and who is applying early and who is in the mix sooner rather than
later. That communicates to us someone who is organized and someone who is
really interested. To the extent that the applicant can tailor their
application to the particular law school that they are applying to, that can
be, not all the time, but can be very effective. So if someone is applying to The goal is to
use your application to connect personally with the admissions committee. Derek,
what goals should an applicant keep in mind to communicate that along with
presenting that unique voice the student will contribute? “I think it’s
important that an applicant be able to articulate why it is that they are doing
it and where that motivation is coming from. Beyond that, communicating why
that particular law school may be the best fit or best place for the applicant
to get his or her education.” Paul, you
suggest that applicants communicate their depth and their brilliance to the
admissions committee. What goals should they keep in mind in the application?
“They need to make sure that their application is communicating that they have
the skills and potential for law school and those skills are things like
writing skills, analytical ability, research skills and you can demonstrate
that not only through academic successes but through professional and community
involvement. Second, they need to communicate that they’ve thought about their
decision to go to law school, either by stating concrete, savvy goals, after
law school career goals, or by showing that they have researched what the law
actually is. And by that, I mean speaking to lawyers or taking classes on the
law. Third, they need to communicate that they can contribute to the class in
specific ways. The admissions committee is trying to build a diverse class so
they need to consciously think about what they can contribute to that class and
it could be, you know, a unique set of life experiences, a distinctive
perspective on the world or demonstrated history of contributing to
organizations or society. Fourth, they need to communicate that they have the
temperament and soft skills, in addition to hard skills, to succeed in law
school and by that I mean by showing that they are a team player, that they are
mature, that they have leadership experiences and that, of course, they have
integrity or the ethical values that law schools are looking for these days.” Each piece of
the application presents a candidate with an opportunity to speak to the people
in the admissions office. Mark, you say students should keep in mind these
goals as they communicate with the admissions committee. “I think that it is
really important to, first and foremost, convey a sense of who you are. So your
personality, your character, and all of that. I think that the more of a
connection a person reading your application gets from your package of
materials the more likely they are to like you, they will want to admit you and
see you in their incoming class. I think also, at the same time, it’s really
important to demonstrate through as much of your materials as possible a
commitment to academic excellence. So the fact that you think you will succeed
in their law school, you’ll do well. I
think that admissions offices are constantly looking at people who will do well
in their law school and who will thrive and survive and do well and teach other
people at the same time that they are learning. And so that commitment to
excellence, that dedication is something, a goal, I would make sure that you
get that through in your admissions package.” Assistant Dean
for Admissions, Ann Perry, says to keep in mind that the admissions committees
now have as large a job going through the applications as the students did in filling
them out. What goals should an applicant keep in mind to communicate with the
admissions committee in the application? “Communicating their strongest
possible application, meaning their strongest grades, their strongest personal
statement. And the personal statement at all schools is probably different
depending on the questions that a school asks. At Dean Cornblatt,
do you have any examples of applicants who have missed the boat? “If you have
done this long enough, you can always tell an applicant who is sort of rushing
through what they are doing. The essay is slapped together a little bit, it’s
not particularly well thought out. The recommendations are coming in and no one
is giving any real thought to who they want to recommend for them. So, I think
those are easy to stand out. As far as standing out in a more positive way, the
ones who stand out the most in the most positive way are, the first paragraph
of your first personal statement. That’s the one that sort of catches our eye
or doesn’t. And that really is in the applicant’s hands. And so, I would say, well, working on the
personal statement is very, very important in this process, sort of in the
beginning , in kind of catching us, catching our attention. That’s the most
important piece. Like any good writing, any good TV show, anything that is meant
to communicate to an audience. If you
can catch us and grab us early on, that’s the most effective way to maximize
your chances.” Writing a killer
personal statement can be the key to success. This is where your personality
and passion come through, where you can demonstrate fit and it is often the
first and best opportunity for an admissions officer to hear your individual
voice in the application. Dean Cornblatt, what is the most effective way an
applicant can use the personal statement? “The most effective ones are to the
point, start off strong and they let us get to know the applicant. The test
that I always tell applicants to do is, when you’re done writing the personal
statement, hand it to somebody that you know and ask them to read it and then
ask them the following question. If you had never met me before, do you know me
better now than before you read the personal statement? If the answer to that
question is yes, you’re right on. If the answer to that question is no, go back
and write it again.” Assistant Dean
Perry, how do you distinguish your personal statement from the rest? “There’s
not a perfect personal statement, there is not a model to find. But it needs to
be the applicant’s best writing - meaning they’re getting their point across as
clearly and as well as possible. It needs to let the committee know about that
person. I can only highlight ones that stick out that aren’t great, meaning
they’ve re-written their resume or, they had terrible typos in them. An
applicant needs to be careful not to be too cutesy, for lack of a better word,
in their personal statement, meaning I have some people who have written a
poem. I don’t think that is a good use of the space of a personal statement.”
Do any stick in your mind as particularly good? “One type of personal statement,
and I am not going to give an exact sample of it, but it is when an applicant
has been able to take an experience, be it an internship, be it one day at an
internship, of what they accomplished or did that day, that they learned from
and they grew from and it got them to this point that they’ve realized law
school is their next step.” Paul, you’ve
written a book called Great Personal
Statements for Law School; you say the best essays focus on the applicant’s
own life and experiences. A winning personal statement reflects candor,
introspection and self-awareness. What is your advice for distinguishing your
personal statement from the rest? “The key is primarily by being yourself.
Everyone is unique and so, if you stick to your life story rather than some
idea that you have of what law schools want to hear or what they expect to see
in an essay, you will be on really solid ground. You need to be savvy and
selective about the stories you focus on.
For example, someone who spent five years living in What goes into
your personal statement Derek? “The rule of thumb with a personal statement in the
law school admissions process is to ‘show rather than tell.’ So when you’re
talking about perhaps a particular job that you’ve held you want to really hone
in on a specific case that you worked on, a specific project and really take
the reader into the experience so that you’re really living out the experience
almost so that as the readers going through it they are feeling what the applicants
feeling and learning those lessons.” Dean Cornblatt,
you say students should articulately describe their background, a slice of their
life that illuminates who they really are, it could be something they overcame
or public service work. Can you give an example? “Like all good writing it got
me because you’re reading this, you just say to yourself, this is somebody I
want to know more. This is somebody who would fit in well in this community and
who the faculty would love to have sitting in their class. If that is strong
enough, and if that comes across vividly enough, then even if the GPA and the
LSAT may not necessarily admit, because they are not above the median, or
whatever it might be, those students get in. There are 30 or 40 of our first
year students here who are here because how they presented themselves was so
compelling that we said, ‘yes’.” Outstanding
letters of recommendations are another key component to the application process
that can make all of the difference. Paul, what are the three basic elements
sought by the admissions committees? “Above all they are looking for actual
first-hand knowledge of the applicant over an extended period of time. Letters
from, for example, famous professors or lawyers are basically useless if the
recommender has not gotten to know the applicant well. Second, they are looking
for concrete examples that show that the applicant has the skills and the
personality traits that law schools value. I see a lot of recommendation
letters that are full of praise, but they never back that praise up with
specific stories and anecdotes and those are really essential. Finally, I think
that those recommendation letters need to show enthusiasm. A lukewarm or pro-forma
letter that sounds like the recommender’s heart is not really in the process,
it can be a kiss of death. I think you need a warmly, personal letter that
shows that the recommender really does think highly of the applicant and then
backs that enthusiasm up with concrete stories that can really help you stand
out.” Dean Perry, what
are admissions committees looking for in the recommendations? “We want to know
the academic capabilities of the applicant. We want to know how they handle
classroom work, how their research skills are, what their performance was in
the class and so I always encourage students to make sure they form
relationships with their professors, especially if they are not going to apply
for a few years after undergrad and keep in touch with that faculty member so
that, when they are ready to apply, they can get a very good letter of
recommendation. I like to see what this person who is evaluating the applicant
sees in the potential of this applicant -- how this person has performed in the
classroom or in a work environment, if it’s someone that they have worked with,
how they have handled problems, how they have taken initiative in leadership
roles in the class or in the work setting. It’s not that I just want to see
that they came to class on time every day. How they may be improved over a
class or, if they have taken multiple classes from the same professor, how they
have improved over those few classes.” Dean Cornblatt,
what do you want to see in the letters of recommendation? “It’s not so much
that you can all of the sudden just order up the stellar recommendation. It is that
you need to think through who it is that knows you best and that is really
ready to write strongly on your behalf. After that, it’s up to the recommender.
You can’t tell the recommender what to write so you don’t have any control over
that. The thing over which you have control is who is writing them. So don’t
think we are starry eyed about famous people or important people at your
college, congressmen or anything like that. I left starry eyed behind years ago.
This is about who knows the applicant best, and my experience is that, the more
the recommender knows the applicant, the better the recommendation is going to
be.” So Paul, how do
students get stellar letters? “They have
to be a little bit shrewd about who they ask to begin with. They need to
actually give the recommender the opportunity to back out. If they suspect that
the recommender is not going to give them that enthusiastic detailed letter,
they have to give the recommender the chance to communicate that and that’s the
key part. Most college professors will be veteran writers of recommendation
letters but you may find some that may need to be a bit educated on the process
about what the schools are looking for. The way to do that is the student can
give the recommender, sort of, a guide sheet that will summarize what the
student has achieved under the recommender as well as the strengths that the
student is going to be highlighting in his or her application. Those are the key points I’d mention.” Dean Perry, what
is your advice for students to get stellar letters of recommendations? “It’s forming a relationship with those
professors - taking multiple classes from the professor, so the professor can
really know their work and can speak to their capability.” Derek, what else
should an applicant know about getting good letters? “The most important thing
that the admissions committee is looking for is evidence that the applicant is
going to succeed in law school. Okay, so what does it take to succeed in law
school? Again, excellent writing, that’s the most important thing. So, a letter
from someone who can comment on the applicant’s writing and again, give really
specific examples of projects or papers, theses and those types of things.
Strong analytical and reasoning skills, problem solving skills, research skills,
I mean, these are all essential to doing well in law school. So, someone who
can, again, give specific examples of work, whether it be academic or
professional work experience, where the applicant was using those skills. Now,
law school, of course, also requires many skills that are not necessarily
academic-based, but things like focus, discipline, commitment, initiative,
attention to detail, ability to juggle multiple responsibilities and work under
pressure and meet deadlines. To some
extent, law school is the test of one’s endurance; how much work they can
handle in a short amount of time. So having letters of recommendation that
address any of those types of characteristics is really beneficial. The other
thing is, legal education, I mean the way that it is taught, much of the
classroom discussion is driven by the students, especially in the first year,
most of the classes are taught on the Socratic Method so the professor is often
questioning and drawing the answers out through the discussion among the
students. So class participation is what it is all about basically in law
school. So I always looked for that in letters of recommendation when I was the
dean of admissions.” As a student who
had to get those letters of recommendation, Mark, what’s the best approach?
“Just sitting down and talking to the recommender before you have them write
you a letter can be very useful. You know, show them a copy of your personal
statement, show them your resume, discuss why you are going to law school, what
your long-term goals are and, in addition, being candid with your recommender,
saying I would love to get a recommendation from you. But if you are too busy, or if you think I
should ask someone else, subtly is also a good way of gauging whether or not
the recommender that you are thinking of asking might be able to write you a
glowing letter of recommendation or whether you’d be better off looking
somewhere else.” When applicants
have a unique background or special experience, how can they showcase that in
their application, Paul? “If they really do have that unique background they
might consider focusing almost the entire essay on kind of exploring the
significance of that experience in their life. They can also make sure that
they are writing about their unique background or experiences vividly,
candidly, and thoughtfully as possible.
And by that, I mean they use lively, detailed language by being honest
and self-revealing about the experience or background, what it meant to them,
how it changed them and by showing that they can step back and think deeply
about their own lives, in other words, they can draw appropriate lessons from
that experience. Other ways of doing this “highlighting unique backgrounds
outside of the essays” is by asking your recommenders to comment on it and, in
the data section of the application or in the resume you submit, you can also
highlight activities that reflect that unique background. That’s another way of
doing it.” Our experts who
are, or have been, on the front line of evaluating law school applications
agree, there are certain ways that applicants can articulate, feature and
highlight unique aspects of experience. Dean Perry? “Some people do that in
their personal statement but some people do add an addendum, which I think is a
way to do it, by adding an addendum to their application. But I think the
applicant needs to show good judgment in the choices that they make in adding
extra materials because the last thing an admissions committee will want is 15
addendum to an application that don’t really say anything different. One or two
addendum are fine; once it gets into the three, four, five range, I think it is
excessive.” Dean Cornblatt
from And Derek, what
are your suggestions for showcasing special backgrounds or experiences? “They
are going to have to write a personal statement but that doesn’t mean that is
the only essay that they can send. If there really is something else that they
have to offer that is unique, whether it be based on personal background,
culture or academic-related or a particular job or occupation, they could
always write a one page supplemental essay that focused specifically on that
unique background experience.” A student’s
academic record “is what it is” and the admissions committee will see it. Paul,
what should a student do about perceived weaknesses in their application, for
example, a low GPA or a low LSAT? “Generally, once you have started the
application process there is not a lot you can do about the low GPA. It sort of
depends on the nature of the GPA. In
other words, let’s say you had bad grades your freshman year and the reasons
were the standard reason, that you were unfocused or not quite ready for school,
then you can use an optional essay or addendum to emphasize how your grades
improved in the last three years at school. Another scenario is you basically
have a strong GPA but you have some D’s or F’s that need explaining, so you
could use the addendum to explain maybe external factors, whether it was a
family crisis or a health issue that caused the low grades and then emphasize
how high your GPA was when those grades are held out. That’s about as much
damage control you can do on the GPA. And there’s actually less you can do on
the low LSAT because the extenuating reasons for a low LSAT don’t really carry
a lot of weight. Some people will just try to say they are just not good standardized
test takers and I don’t know how far that will get them with a lot of schools unless
they really have strong evidence that is the case. And even then, the LSAT is so important to
law school admissions that you either have a good one or you don’t. So the
addendum is there to do that kind of explaining for you but you want to be very
upfront, mature about the explanations, very honest and brief and accentutate
the positive, I’d say, is the advice I’d give.” Our current and
former law school admission directors have some specific suggestions on how to
handle perceived weaknesses in the application. Dean Perry? “Everyone will
always have a perceived weakness and I think they just need to make sure that
everything else is strong. And if there is a reason for that weakness, they can
write an addendum describing it. But I don’t think they need to be using the
addendum just to make explanations that are somewhat obvious. But if there is a true reason why, maybe they
had one bad quarter, or one bad semester, they might want to identify that so
the committee knows and it will look like a blip on the transcript.” Dean Cornblatt,
you have advice about these perceived weaknesses. “Let’s take, for example, you
took a very demanding curriculum and, let’s say that’s why your GPA was low or
relatively low. Well, you can mention that but I would strongly urge that you
ask one of your recommenders at the college or someone who knows you well, to
talk about that and say that, listen, you know that Andy Cornblatt is a fine
student. You see his GPA is a little bit
on the low side but you should know that he took a very demanding curriculum
here at whatever college they are at and that that impacted his GPA, but don’t
misread that for being somebody who isn’t very smart, you know, that kind of
stuff. For the LSAT, in general, you did what you did. But sometimes, we see a correlation between
SAT scores and LSAT scores. So, if
you’re somebody who has a strong GPA but has an okay, but not stellar, LSAT, but
that was the exact profile that you had when you were in high school and the
college you went to took a chance on you because your SATs were just okay and
look how great you did. So those are the dots that you can connect for us, that
your recommenders can connect for us, that will help mitigate this whole
thing.” Derek what
should a student do about perceived weaknesses do in the application? “Your
personal statement is your showcase piece; you really want it to showcase your
strength, your accomplishments, the voice, the perspective, the contribution
that you’ll bring. So if there is something that you need to address, such as
low GPA, erratic grades or a low LSAT, just an addendum, usually no more than one
page, they would just much rather hear an applicant just admit the mistake, own
it and express what they learned from it rather than trying to make excuses or
perhaps being a little defensive about it.” Some students
use law school application consultants to help guide them through what can be a
daunting process. There is debate over whether that is a good idea. Dean
Cornblatt, what do you think of students hiring consultants? “From my point of
view, generally, we can detect synthetic applications that have clearly been
packaged and done all that, in that way. As a person who reads these things,
genuineness is the thing that matters most to me, sincerity and really getting
to know the person and I think that is something every applicant can do
themselves. They don’t need some
consultant or somebody that they pay to help them be genuine. I think there is
enough good advice around them, something like what we’re doing right now, and
good advice at various visits that schools make to different campuses across
the country. Go talk to professionals about this and, you know, we’re happy to
give you our opinions and points of view for free.” What do you
think, Dean Perry, of the idea of students hiring consultants to perfect their
law school applications, “If it’s comfortable for the applicants, if it gives
them a comfort level that they can afford, then it’s fine. But I don’t think it’s at all necessary. I
think these students are very bright, capable people and they can do an
application on their own. The applicant just wants to come across as themselves
as much as possible in the application and not to let a consultant muddy the
waters too much. The other thing they need to do is reach out to their pre-law
advisors from their undergrad even if they have been out of school for a
while. More and more pre-law advisors
are working with alumnus and that’s a much easier and more cost efficient way
to get help with law school applications.” Paul, you are a
consultant, what should students be aware of if they hire a consultant? “They
don’t want to cross the line and work with people who are offering to write the
essays for them. I think the big advantage that consultants offer is, it can
help you step back and look at your life objectively and say what is unique
about my profile, what should I be highlighting, what are maybe some danger
areas, some weaknesses that the law schools will be sensitive to, how do I
approach those? So, a consultant who has worked with dozens of applicants over
the years is going to have that perspective on what is really distinctive about
someone and how they can highlight that through their personal statement.” Derek you’ve
been a dean of admissions and now you’re a consultant, how can consultants help
applicants? “The whole process can be overwhelming and applicants really
struggle sometimes in trying to determine what is the best way to present
themselves in the application process. So
a consultant, hopefully, these are consultants who have all actually made
admissions decisions and worked on law school admissions committees so at least
you know that you’re speaking with someone who has actually been on the inside
and that is often the best source of information.” Dean Perry, when
all is said and done how can a student create a killer application? “It’s just
taking the time to do it to the best of their ability. I can tell when an
application has been rushed and I think it’s taking the time to think through who
they want to write the recommendation. When
they are putting together their resume, making sure it has a lot of the
information that gets what they have done across, and I think it’s just getting
things on time, following directions and letting the committee know that by
doing a strong application we know they are taking it seriously.” Mark, do you
have any more advice for students applying to law school? “Make sure that you
are applying to law schools that you would be happy to go to so that you will
devote the attention to each application that it deserves and that it needs.
And being able to explain why you want to go to this law school or that law
school. And I think that it’s important to apply to a range of schools because,
you know, it’s a competitive process. And
you know, sometimes it can be very random, and making sure that you don’t apply
to only the best schools or only the schools that you’re positive that you’ll
get into, and that you are applying to a range of schools is really important
and making sure that everything is well done and thought through and that you
don’t throw everything together at the last minute. I think that’s very
important.” When evaluating
applications, admissions officers look at all of the pieces: test scores, grades essays, letters of
recommendations and extracurricular activities. Andy, you advise students to
avoid the trap of thinking that this is simply about GPAs and LSATs and nothing
else matters. “There’s all kinds of stuff that goes into this so, at least at
Georgetown, we’re anxious to put together a diverse, terrific, variety of
students that we’re lucky enough to have here and that’s part of the fun of the
job is to put all of the pieces together so, that what they say in the cliché,
we wind up having an orchestra and we don’t just admit violinists. We want
people from all over helping us make the class that we have right now and even
better in future years.” Essays, letters
of recommendations, examples of leadership, and your extracurricular activities,
these are the ways that you articulate to the admissions committee who you are.
The key to creating the “killer” application is to do these things well. Think
about ways to make your personal statement error free and vibrant, rich with personal
stories and specific illustrations about how you would contribute to life at a
particular law school. While there is no single accomplishment or activity that
will across-the-board make a candidate stand out, an application has to reflect
an applicant’s life experience, what makes them unique and what new dimension
they can add to a class or a school they are considering. And, if you decide that a consultant is right
for you and for your application needs, choose carefully from among those
qualified and be an educated consumer of the services offered. I’m Diana Jordan
with Law School Podcaster, thanks for listening. Stay tuned for more shows as
we explore another topic of interest to help you succeed in the law school
application process and beyond.” |
|||||||||