How your application fares
depends on how your record compares to other applicants
to your law schools. There are over 175 ABA accredited law
schools. Many accept students with less than stellar records.
Nonetheless, not everyone who wants to go to law school
is accepted.
There are strategies for
borderline students to improve their chances of acceptance.
Becoming a resident of a state can put a candidate in a
different pool for state-supported law schools. Taking a
year or two off for service or to work allows you to include
your final semester's grades, and gives you a broader range
of experience that may appeal to admissions committees.
If your GPA is really hurting
your chances, taking several years off can help. The more
distance you put between you and your undergraduate GPA,
the lesser its negative impact on your application. If you
GPA is low, but your LSAT is high, you might want to consider
this option seriously. Letters of recommendation from professors
who attest that your ability is not reflected in your overall
GPA may also help.
If your LSAT score is poor,
but your GPA is high, you may be able to convincingly argue
that your standardized test performance is unreliable. Assuming
your SAT scores were also low, you may compare your predicted
undergraduate performance based on those SATs to your actual
performance. Showing that your SATs were a poor predictor
of your college success may help convince some admissions
committees to discount your poor LSAT performance. Retaking
the LSAT and scoring higher will boost your average. Some
schools will consider your higher score rather than just
your average; it might be wise to apply to schools with
that policy.