Anonymous wrote:Stop making up fake stories to gripe about white ppl not getting into school. Once again, I would bet that no one has ever been waitlisted at the all of the top 10, 12, 13 etc.
Anonymous wrote:It's as simple as this. A 4.0 GPA is very good for WAsh U Law. Below indicates a 3.12 is the rate of those enrolls. so the school - which has rolling admissions - always a bad sign of a school on the rise - is willing to lock into OP's kid NOW in order to get that GPA. But OP's kid is forgoing the opportunity to apply to the higher hanged law schools. Since everything today is about T14 or above to get a job, this is a very bad offer.
What are the odds of getting into WashULaw?
What is the Washington University Law School Acceptance Rate?
Applications Offers
Class of 2023 4,613 1275 (27,64%)
25% Median
GPA 3.18 3.67
LSAT 161 167
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school admissions are no longer just GPA and LSAT. DC had a 3.9 and 174 and waitlisted at all T13. It’s more like undergrad - they want diversity of some kind.
well, to be fair, the 75th percentile at Harvard last year has a 3.99gpa and a 176 LSAT, meaning 25 percent had higher, so, yes, that means waitlist for your DD. It's not "fair" but that's the current system
What is your obsession with Harvard? Who mentioned Harvard?
1) we are talking about law schools
2) the PP above said their DC had a 3.9 and a 174 and was waitlisted at all T13, which includes Harvard.
3) I went to Harvard and just happen to have the incoming classes' stats memorized.
The point was being made that the PP who claimed her high ranking kid was waitlisted with a 3.99 and 174 at all T13s makes sense. Her stats had to be higher for Harvard, especially if not hooked or had an "oomph" credential earned after college graduation.
No, she said her child had a 3.9 (not 3.99) and a 174 -those are below Harvard Law's 75th percentile so not surprising that her kid was waitlisted. Harvard's 75th percentile last year was a 3.99 and LSAT was 176
This is all lies told by the KKK pro white troll. No one gets waitlisted by the entire top 14. I would venture to say that’s never happened. If you don’t get into Harvard with 3.9 174, you surely get into at worst NYU. Very likely In at Berkeley, Northwestern, Cornell, Duke, Michigan, GTown and UVA as well. Def getting into at least one of those schools. Stop with the fake claims.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school admissions are no longer just GPA and LSAT. DC had a 3.9 and 174 and waitlisted at all T13. It’s more like undergrad - they want diversity of some kind.
well, to be fair, the 75th percentile at Harvard last year has a 3.99gpa and a 176 LSAT, meaning 25 percent had higher, so, yes, that means waitlist for your DD. It's not "fair" but that's the current system
What is your obsession with Harvard? Who mentioned Harvard?
1) we are talking about law schools
2) the PP above said their DC had a 3.9 and a 174 and was waitlisted at all T13, which includes Harvard.
3) I went to Harvard and just happen to have the incoming classes' stats memorized.
The point was being made that the PP who claimed her high ranking kid was waitlisted with a 3.99 and 174 at all T13s makes sense. Her stats had to be higher for Harvard, especially if not hooked or had an "oomph" credential earned after college graduation.
No, she said her child had a 3.9 (not 3.99) and a 174 -those are below Harvard Law's 75th percentile so not surprising that her kid was waitlisted. Harvard's 75th percentile last year was a 3.99 and LSAT was 176
This is all lies told by the KKK pro white troll. No one gets waitlisted by the entire top 14. I would venture to say that’s never happened. If you don’t get into Harvard with 3.9 174, you surely get into at worst NYU. Very likely In at Berkeley, Northwestern, Cornell, Duke, Michigan, GTown and UVA as well. Def getting into at least one of those schools. Stop with the fake claims.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school admissions are no longer just GPA and LSAT. DC had a 3.9 and 174 and waitlisted at all T13. It’s more like undergrad - they want diversity of some kind.
well, to be fair, the 75th percentile at Harvard last year has a 3.99gpa and a 176 LSAT, meaning 25 percent had higher, so, yes, that means waitlist for your DD. It's not "fair" but that's the current system
What is your obsession with Harvard? Who mentioned Harvard?
1) we are talking about law schools
2) the PP above said their DC had a 3.9 and a 174 and was waitlisted at all T13, which includes Harvard.
3) I went to Harvard and just happen to have the incoming classes' stats memorized.
The point was being made that the PP who claimed her high ranking kid was waitlisted with a 3.99 and 174 at all T13s makes sense. Her stats had to be higher for Harvard, especially if not hooked or had an "oomph" credential earned after college graduation.
No, she said her child had a 3.9 (not 3.99) and a 174 -those are below Harvard Law's 75th percentile so not surprising that her kid was waitlisted. Harvard's 75th percentile last year was a 3.99 and LSAT was 176
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Law school admissions are no longer just GPA and LSAT. DC had a 3.9 and 174 and waitlisted at all T13. It’s more like undergrad - they want diversity of some kind.
People don’t appreciate this until they actually experience it
It’s comical to hear middle-aged lawyers on here saying they got into Harvard with a 3.7 and 175
100%
What's even more comical is watching a Harvard trained BigLaw attorney get her ass kicked by a Wash U. grad in a motion hearing, and then finding her crying in the courtroom bathroom because "I went to HARVARD!"
Girl, please. Either the facts and the law are on your side, or they're not. Either you know how to marshall the law and facts into a coherent argument or you don't. The judge doesn't care that you went to Harvard.
/True story
(Wash U. grad was my senior partner. )