The Week in (Law) Review – November 6, 2015 LSAT Roundup
All things LSAT-and-law-school-related from the past week, for your niche media consumption delight. 🎓💼
Harvard Law professor: “Don’t baby law school applicants”
The Week in (Law) Review – October 23rd, 2015 LSAT Roundup
All things LSAT-and-law-school-related from the past week, for your niche media consumption delight. 🎓💼
U.S. News issues erroneous surveys, potentially invalidates Law School Rankings results 👍
The Week in (Law) Review – October 16th, 2015 LSAT Roundup
All things LSAT-and-law-school-related from the past week, for your niche media consumption delight. 🎓💼
Local woman narrowly averts disaster, becomes lawyer rather than librarian 📚😱➡️😅💼
The Week in (Law) Review – October 9th, 2015 LSAT Roundup
All things LSAT-and-law-school-related from the past week, for your niche media consumption delight. 🎓💼
Law school applications on the rise 📈
A recent survey determined that 88% of law school admissions officers at 120 law schools across the U.S. are predicting a rise in applications for the first time in years. One possible explanation for this optimism is that, due to the relatively smaller number of top students currently applying to law school, there has never been a less competitive time to get into a top program; if law school has been on your bucket list, now would be the time to pursue it. Read more
Friday Links: International Law School Applicants, Yale’s New Law Program, Pros and Cons of Law School and More
Get your weekly fix of law school and other legal-related news from some of this week’s top articles:
2 Unique Challenges of Applying to Law School as an International Student (U.S. News Education)
For international law school applicants, the application process can be very complex. U.S. News Education shares two challenges international applicants may face and some helpful solutions to get you through the process.
Study Names Top 10 Law Schools by Impact of Faculty (JD Journal)
According to a study of all the American Bar Association accredited law schools, researchers ranked the schools based on their scholarly impacts of law faculty. The researchers looked at citations for the faculty that were given in legal literature over the past five years.
Read more