Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Law School Requirements - You Better Make the Grade to Get In

The law school requirements vary from the different institutions, but the basic minimum standards are set in stone. The first step is that every law student has already received a bachelor's degree from an accredited university or college. A complete transcription of your accomplishments including your GPA has to be submitted to the prospective law school you wish to attend.

In a student's last year before graduating with their bachelor's degree, they should have taken the LSAT. This score along with the students GPA has a great influence on whether they will be accepted or denied entrance, but that is not all that matters.

Each school prefers to have a diverse set of students that are enrolled at their institution. For this purpose, an applicant's race is a part of the consideration process. This is not a way of discriminating against someone because of their race, but instead giving applicants from all races an equal opportunity to become enrolled.

Other factors that an applicant has direct influence on are whether an applicant is accepted or denied. These factors are extremely important if you are close to being on the bubble of being accepted. These are your letters of recommendation and your admissions essays. By always having good study habits along with good attendance, your professors are in a position to help influence your review with the officials.

One factor can push admissions over the edge and give it the best chance of being accepting is if you know of any person that has connections to the school of your choice. This can be a past graduate that excelled there or has made financial donations to the educational institution. The amount of influence of these people will vary greatly. It is not always what you know but who you know if you are on the bubble requirements.

Understanding various law school requirements can make the difference between getting into the law school of your dreams and sitting on the sidelines. For more information about how you can make it into law school, visit http://www.lawschoolrequirements.org today.

1 comment:

Life Experience Degrees Suck said...

There are alot of people in the world who don't have a college degree. There is absolutely nothing wrong with that, but in some cases, it can hold a person back. Well I was one of those people.

Looking back, it may have been more psychological than a real problem, but I was looking at teaching English in S.E Asia and I thought that a degree would be helpful. I was sorta wrong and sorta right. Herein lies the reason for my blog. Perhaps it will save you from experiencing some of the challenges I had.

First of all a little about me, I am 37 years old and an accomplished professional musician. Well, perhaps not as accomplished as I could be. Money in my home state of Arkansas was getting harder and harder to come by. The thought of teaching English in Asia has always appealed to me. So it was time to branch out. That was early in 2007.

My problem was I never completed college and thus had no degree. I Googled 'life experience degrees' and decided on one. It was not a problem, quick and efficient. So far, so good.

I'm not going to tell you the country in S.E. Asia that I went to because I don't want to burn any bridges, but my degree helped me get a job in a government owned school. I got my visa and all the required documentation. Everything went swimmingly for six weeks.

Then my boss reviewed my file and Googled the life experience degree school. That was the end of my career, at least at that school. He was polite enought, but there was no wiggle room, I was out.

I had a good friend who was working in Russia who said she thought she could help me. She was using a degree that had worked effectively for three years. It had worked with government and two schools. She gave me a code because she would make a commission if I purchased one, and she said it was the only way I could get one. I wasn't sure what to make of it, so I looked it up.

It was a bit of a twist on the old life experience degree. They were using the names of closed institutions. I used my friends code and got a bachelors degree from them. It has turned out very useful. No problem with my new job. If my current director of studies looks it up, he will find it is closed. No way he can trace it and I am working away. Pay isn't fantastic but it's cheap to live here and lotsa sunshine.

With my degree came my promo code. If you would like to find out more, go to worryfreedegrees.webs.com and the code is SE1044.

If you have any questions, contact me at johnsiminton@gmail.com. Remember, when you purchase a degree I get a commission, but then when your friend purchases one, you get a commission.

If you are thinking of working in S.E. Asia, I might be able to assist you find a job. And, you'll need a degree to work here. Cheers, John.

P.S. Google life exeperience degreesw suck and watch some of the YouTubes, there are some good ones there.