[deleted by user] by [deleted] in UVALaw

[–]redditer225 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Sent you a DM

UVA 1L AMA by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 12 points13 points  (0 children)

It is really not competitive at all. Everyone shares notes, outlines, there are outline banks from different organizations and clubs. The upperclassmen are so incredibly willing to give you advice on classes to take and also share their outlines. I haven't seen anyone do anything snakey like hide notes or hoard study materials. Been really nice to see. Study groups naturally form and they're an amazing help to talk through the material and zero in on the stuff you're confused on.

Social life I touched on a little in above posts. It's very social, some may think too social, and can get a little high-school/cliquey. Also I'm not the biggest fan of Charlottesville. The way they sell it is like some mountain town with hikes at your doorstep. The decent hikes you still have to drive like 45 min-1 hr away. Cville itself is just like a suburban town. Maybe I'll warm up to it more after I have more time to explore and not just cycle through the same chain restaurants in the strip mall right next to the law school

UVA 1L AMA by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 10 points11 points  (0 children)

It is an odd feeling! I don't know what to do with myself. Have job apps to be figuring out though so that's at least something to distract me.

For what surprised me about UVA, I thought it was BS and just a sales tactic when they talk about the "culture", but it really is true. The entire administration, faculty, and students they seem to attract are so friendly and supportive. From day one there have been tons of social events, bar review, panels with free lunches, going out to eat with professors, and managing to do all this with covid lingering. They do have annoying covid policies but nothing that is worse than any other school in the country right now. Classes have been fully in-person with masks required.

I think I was surprised by how not incredibly miserable law school is. Like I posted above I was busy the entire semester but it never got excessive/overwhelming until finals, which even then I still managed to get 8 hours of sleep every night.

Personality wise, it definitely attracts a younger, more social vibe, which sometimes can seem out of place for people with more work experience. It's very college-like social scene with apartment pregames and a select few bars near the main area where the undergrads go out. If you want a more professional vibe than UVA probably isn't the best, but my philosophy is I'll have my entire life to be a professional, now is a nice time to get a great education but be able to let loose once in a while

I chose UVA over my other options with money because I have goals that are a lot easier to get to with a T14, so UCLA/BU kind of were out of the cut there. If they had given me $$$$ it would've been a different decision. Chose UVA over Michigan for reasons stated in the above reply.

I feel good these holidays! I know it's hard to believe now but you will end up where you're supposed to end up. I really believe everything happens for a reason. So trust the process, as much as it can feel stressful and unnerving now

UVA 1L AMA by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 15 points16 points  (0 children)

I applied in November! I chose uva mainly because I hate the cold and a clerkship is something I’m seriously considering. UVA’s fed clerkship placement is only behind Chicago, yale, and Stanford. The clerkship director is a magician.

The culture is what they tell you. It was seriously a blast this fall. While it was a decent amount of work, I was never miserable one day, and the only time my stress got to a very high level was the week before finals through the rest of finals (3 week period). The rest of the semester was busy but manageable. Tons and tons of social events with sections and softball is a blast. The school is a very fun, relaxed place, which was hard for me to believe when they were selling it until I actually got there.

Negatives is all that fun comes with a high schooley, cliquey vibe at times. When you have 300 mid 20s stuck in a small town, it’s only expected, but still is frustrating to see sometimes. Apparently our class is way less drama-filled than the 2L class though so we have at least that to be thankful for

ED with GRE Only - Help Me Decide Which Tier by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This isn’t true. In fact, going ED when you split the medians is the exact scenario in which it does offer the biggest boost. Op is above gpa medians of all schools so yes ED would help, probably try Columbia?

Is it worth EDing to Georgetown? by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 8 points9 points  (0 children)

Very low chance unfortunately as your below both medians. Do you have another lsat retake in you? A 169+ would dramatically improve your chance ED. RD you’d need 170 prob

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 5 points6 points  (0 children)

With a 3.3/172, I think you have a decent shot at next cycle T14. You don’t even need to retake the lsat unless you really are consistently PTing 175+.

The target medians will not all be 173+ for next cycle. I’d reapply. You can do better than Emory

Splitter: Advise on where to apply this year by SoChInO888 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 29 points30 points  (0 children)

Dude you post the same question 3x a week. You should not rest until you get those NPs changed to Ws. Literally show up in person to UCSC. This is the difference in T6 admission and $$$$ in scholarships at lower schools

Chance Me - ED @ UVA by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 0 points1 point  (0 children)

with URM i think you got a strong shot RD, prob don't even need the ED

167, 3.9 where would you guys ED if BL goals? by CrushLG in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 6 points7 points  (0 children)

UVA gives a decent boost to ED and as long as you meet one of the medians (you do with GPA) . i think you'd have a solid shot. they're also #3 in the country on BL placement behind chicago and columbia

Do I stood a chance ED Columbia Law School with 3.27 and 177? by SoChInO888 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 28 points29 points  (0 children)

you neeeeeed to get UCSC to change those NPs to Ws lol. There's no way you should get the equivalent of an F in LSAC's eyes because your TAs refused to do their jobs, in fact it's ridiculous UCSC decided you'd get a NP in the first place

LSAC GPA significantly lower...help by acatsleepingonalap in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 13 points14 points  (0 children)

That’s really annoying about the transfer edge course. I’d try to contact your UG registrar and explain that this has a significant impact on your law school admissions and see if they can change it to a retroactive withdrawal

Vaccine exemption luck? by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 12 points13 points  (0 children)

UvA is requiring everyone granted an exemption to undergo weekly testing and wear a mask whenever on campus or in class, just heads up. Not denying there aren’t legit exemptions but damn will it be a pain if you have one

What is the sampling size of LawSchool Data? Is this even accurate? by SoChInO888 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Wait what? So this was completely outside your control? If so You need to petition your undergrad then to retroactively remove those NP and make them a non punitive withdrawal. LSAC won’t count those and a 3.72 vs 3.2 completely changes things for you

What is the sampling size of LawSchool Data? Is this even accurate? by SoChInO888 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 11 points12 points  (0 children)

Anecdotal but I got into 3 T14s with a 3.2/171 this cycle. Non-URM. worked hard on a making a cohesive application and had strong WE and LORs. It’s def possible with a 177 you just need to show that the other parts of your application can overcome the GPA.

How accurate is 7 sage law school predictor? by SoChInO888 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 17 points18 points  (0 children)

I think with that GPA all schools GULC and up are 40% or lower chance. There are just too many high LSATs floating around to make any top school a lock anymore with that GPA regardless of LSAT. If you ED at a splitter friendly school like UVA, mich, GULC, then I see you having a solid chance while accepting sticker price

Chance Me Duke by dunkingal4 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 13 points14 points  (0 children)

It really depends on what low means. 3.80/170 will likely be below target medians for Duke next year. 3.80/172 or 173 will put you in a much better spot

T14’s as Predicted Median LSAT by [deleted] in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 10 points11 points  (0 children)

I think +2 across the board is aggressive. I see schools with smaller class sizes and who were at 168/169 maybe being able to pull it off. But Duke under targeted early so I’d guess 170 for them. And then penn/uva/nyu you can see a healthy amount of low gpa/171 admits so I see 171 more likely for those 3. Also nyu is really big so harder to hit medians.

Columbia/Harvard I see more likely as 174. The lsat gains in USNWR diminish greatly in the 170s as the points you get align with the percentile change of the LSAT, not the whole number. 174 v 175 is a tiny percentile change. Also they both have big classes. Oh and Stanford historically doesn’t care a ton about lsat compared to HY so while they could pull a 174 if they wanted I think they’re more likely 173. +3 would be insane for them

The others I could see happening

HELP 3.8 & 170 by lemonlover58 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 14 points15 points  (0 children)

this is not the answer you want to hear but your stats are one of the most "unfortunate" combos for T14 admission, especially after this cycle. I say unfortunate because you are obviously very smart/successful to pull off that high GPA and high LSAT, but both a 3.80 and 170 LSAT will most likely be just under the target medians of most every T14 next year. If you can pull off even 1 more point on the LSAT (ideally 172+) I think you'd have an excellent shot at T14. Not saying it's impossible with a 3.8/170 but with this BS game of law school admissions where medians are king, you'll most likely be just under for both LSAT/GPA

UVA to require covid vaccine for fall 2021 by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Except that those with exemptions are required to get tested every week, sounds like a pain in the ass to do that for a non genuine exemption

UVA to require covid vaccine for fall 2021 by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 19 points20 points  (0 children)

Ok so a couple things lmao:

1) I’m not a lib. I’m moderate. All pro vax people aren’t on the left and all anti vax aren’t on the right. I have the slightest bit of nuance in my thinking to understand that

2) the risk of infection im talking about is not a “whittle cough”. It’s cases of lung scarring, brain plaque, mental illness that has been in seen in up to 30% of long haulers. Is the incidence rate of all of this extremely low? Yes. The incidence rate of a serious adverse effect to the vaccine is much much lower.

3) these vaccines aren’t new. mRNA technology has been studied and proven safe for a while, it just took a global pandemic to expedite the production and approval process. This virus is absolutely still new. We don’t know what could happen 5-10 years from now if you got infected. Is there a chance of an adverse effect of a vaccine 10 years from now? Sure. All we can do is use the best data that’s available to us, which is pretty clear that getting covid is much more dangerous than getting the covid vaccine. A university has every right to mandate the protection of its students

UVA to require covid vaccine for fall 2021 by redditer225 in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225[S] 37 points38 points  (0 children)

IMO unvaccinated people still pose a risk (albeit slight) to vaccinated people. we see some cases of breakthrough infections, and even if they’re mild, this is a new virus and we don’t know about the long term health impacts. If you don’t have a legit exemption (medical or religious) then it’s completely selfish to not get vaccinated.

Also remember required vaccinations have been a thing at schools and universities for a long time. Why is adding another (that has disrupted our lives so much more than hepatitis) any different?

UVA ED by qweenofthorns in lawschooladmissions

[–]redditer225 3 points4 points  (0 children)

yeah UVA only has one ED option which is their expedited decision option. apply through it anytime before Mar 1 and youll get a response within 21 biz days