Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m going for a memory here, but I think that there are numerous studies showing that your brain continues to develop until your mid-20s. In other words, that there is a very strong benefit from studying and going to school, college, grad school, etc. younger and after 20 for one or two years could make a huge difference. I would do the gap year after you graduate all of the school you intend to take please do your own research because again I’m going from memory.
Frontal cortex point is valid but most prodigy do their best work before 30. Alexander the great went to conquer the world at 17?
Not just prodigies, most great authors write their best stuff early, most great scientists make their breakthroughs early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew joined Yale Law right out of a souther state school's undergrad and seems to be doing really well. Obviously he had good internship experience.
Internship experience is irrelevant for Law school admissions.
Got him in.
What type of internship ? Thank you in advance for your reply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m going for a memory here, but I think that there are numerous studies showing that your brain continues to develop until your mid-20s. In other words, that there is a very strong benefit from studying and going to school, college, grad school, etc. younger and after 20 for one or two years could make a huge difference. I would do the gap year after you graduate all of the school you intend to take please do your own research because again I’m going from memory.
Frontal cortex point is valid but most prodigy do their best work before 30. Alexander the great went to conquer the world at 17?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My nephew joined Yale Law right out of a souther state school's undergrad and seems to be doing really well. Obviously he had good internship experience.
Internship experience is irrelevant for Law school admissions.
Got him in.