Anonymous wrote:OP here, thanks for the info on getting into law school.
How important are recs? My niece is taking a couple of years off, so she will not be able to ask college professors.
what kind of ECs "dazzle" the law school admissions folks?
Recs aren’t the most important factor (LSAT and GPA are by far the most important). But they are still important since they can be a deciding factor when weighing applicants with similar stats. Since your niece is still in college, she should ask a professor to write their recs now and submit them to LSAC (the law school admission version of College Board/Common App that basically is charge of submitting law school applications on an applicant’s behalf). That way, once she does decide to apply, she’ll have the letters ready, and won’t have to ask a professor who may have forgotten about her to write a letter two years later after she already graduated.
Law school admissions officers tend to really like ECs that are “institutional” like NCAA college athletes, Teach for America, AmericaCorps, Fulbrights (although the future of the program is dicey), competitive post grad scholarships (e.g. Truman, Goldwater, Marshall, Rhodes scholars who turn down Yale Law, etc.). There is a growing trend of weighing in work experience more, following the model of business schools, but again, LSAT and GPA are by far most important.