Advice for the June LSAT

All you June LSAT takers have a lot on your minds right now, and I hope you spend the next couple of days recharging your batteries so you feel fresh as daisies on Monday.

So for today, I'll keep things short and sweet, and point you to some LSAT-related advice I've posted over the last year and a half:

Good luck on Monday.

How Do You Learn? By Reading and Writing... A Lot

Thought for the day:

The study found that students who took courses that required both significant reading (more than 40 pages per week) and writing (more than 20 pages per semester) had higher rates of learning.

(From "Lack of Emphasis On Reading, Writing Impedes College Student Learning, Study Says" by Jamaal Abdul-Alim in Diverse Issues in Higher Education, via Learning vs. Efficiency by Daniel Luzer)

The fact that reading 40 pages a week or writing 20 pages a semester counts as a lot of either (in college!

MIT Unplugged

 

A private eye's office from an L.A. Noir movie? No. That's the MIT Admissions Office. I keep waiting for Sam Spade to emerge.

 

 

The door alone says so much about the school, the culture, their values: "We're looking for beautiful MINDS, not beautiful BLINDS. Fancy admissions offices are for punks." That door is intense, but also funny: check out the emoticon.

You can learn a lot just from strolling around a campus, especially if you go off-tour.

Advice to Law School Applicants on Sunk Costs, Merit Scholarships, and Transfer Plans

It's unfortunate, as Dean Zearfoss of Michigan Law School points out, that the recent NYT exposé about conditional merit scholarships ("Law Students Lose the Grant Game as Schools Win") was published a day *after* law school deposits came due.

In case you missed the article, it profiled the plight of law students who had accepted scholarships that would be renewed after their first year only if they maintained a certain minimum GPA.

Handicapping Your Law School Transfer Odds

Thanks to Above the Law, I was intrigued to learn, on the day of the royal wedding, that the British monarchy owns all of the swans in its fair kingdom. Or it can claim ownership of all unmarked mute swans in open waters, or some such thing. Which got me thinking about Property Law (bundles of sticks, Pierson v. Post, the tragedy of the commons), which got me thinking about 1L classes more generally, and then I started wondering how this year's batch of 1Ls fared.

Staying Sane During Law School Application Season

This is a great time of year to be an applicant, because right now it's easy to hang onto your sanity. At this point, you're probably feeling good about what you'll make happen for your application between now and October, as you should.

Let me give you the heads up about what happens to a lot of applicants between now and then: you might start to feel as if you're losing your mind.

You might start thinking about quitting your job to study for the LSAT full-time.

Law School Application Essays That Worked

The University of Chicago Law School just posted some samples of law school application essays that worked. Check them out -- these are the kinds of essays that top law schools are interested in.

This is good ammunition when your mom/dad/recommender/roommate/fairy godmother demands to know why you're not writing 750 words on "why I want to go to law school," which is NOT the same thing as a personal statement.

Planning Your Law School Application Timeline: It Pays to Be an Early Bird

April is finally here, and as many of you are discovering, the application process isn't anywhere near done after you hit that "submit" button. You've probably received final decisions from at least some of your schools, but chances are, you'll still be waiting for final decisions from other schools (your longer shots) well into the spring and summer, maybe even early fall.

Most of my recent blog postings have been geared to applicants from the current season who are still managing those limbo schools.