The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets: The Essential Guide from Harvard's Former Admissions Dean

The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets: The Essential Guide from Harvard's Former Admissions Dean

by Joyce Curll
The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets: The Essential Guide from Harvard's Former Admissions Dean

The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets: The Essential Guide from Harvard's Former Admissions Dean

by Joyce Curll

eBook

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Overview

The ULTIMATE Insider Information on How to STAND OUT and GET ADMITTED!

When trying to beat the tough law school competition, how do you know what will get you fast-tracked to the "yes" pile (or the dreaded "no" pile)?

No insider is better suited to set you on the right track than Joyce Putnam Curll, former Dean of Admissions for Harvard Law School. The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets is the ultimate collection of insider advice, direct from one of the country's toughest admissions boardrooms.

Joyce Putnam Curll gives you all the tips and techniques you need to stay ahead, including:

  • Preparing your application
  • What sets law schools apart
  • Behind the scenes of the admissions process
  • Taking the LSAT
  • Handling the cost
  • Planning your career
  • And much more

No other law school admissions advice guide can claim this level of authority. The Best Law Schools' Admissions Secrets is sure to give you the edge you need to shine in the eyes of admissions boards everywhere.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781402231995
Publisher: Sourcebooks
Publication date: 07/01/2008
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 272
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Joyce Putnam Curll served for 18 years as Dean of Admissions at Harvard Law School, where she evaluated more than 120,000 applicants for admission to the law school. She formerly worked at NYU Law School, as Director of Admissions for 16 years. She lives in Boston, Massachusetts.

Read an Excerpt

Excerpt from the Introduction

HAVING SPENT THE LAST eighteen years of a thirty-four-year career in law school admissions as Dean of Admissions at Harvard Law School (HLS), I have considered for admission more than 120,000 HLS applicants, of whom about 10,000 applicants attended and graduated from HLS. More than 30 percent of the living alumni of the JD program at HLS were admitted on my watch. Before coming to Harvard, during sixteen years at NYU Law School, I considered another 100,000 applicants, of whom 6,000 became NYU Law graduates.

Throughout, I have had a wonderful window on society and particularly the world of current and recent college graduates, many of whom already had significant accomplishments under their belts and most of whom showed great promise for the future. And I have watched as those futures unfolded. Some students have flourished throughout law school and their careers. Some stumbled a bit before finding their feet; some enjoyed the law school experience, but not the practice; some hated law school, but loved the practice.

I have observed the whole range of possibility with respect to the experience of legal education and the profession. Many roads lead to law school, some direct and others circuitous. I have seen everything from the precocious eighteen-year-old college graduate and the twenty-two-year-old medical doctor who wanted to get a head start on the legal profession, to those who wanted to build on established, successful careers, like the fifty-something-year-old physician, the forty-something screenwriter who became president of the student body, and the forty-something engineer who became president of the Harvard Law Review.

You may be one of the many undergraduates who, seeking a livelihood after graduation, have been exploring the professions and, not liking the sight of blood and not having a knack for organic chemistry, have decided that practicing law would be an appealing way to earn a living. Perhaps you are one of those who tried investment banking or consulting and decided that law will get you where you want to be in a more intellectually stimulating and fulfilling manner. You may have been engaged in work that you enjoy, but see the value of a legal education as a stepping-stone to a more responsible position in the field in which you have been working.

If you are any of these, or are coming to a consideration of law as a career from another perspective, you are not alone in having some idea of what is involved, but still having questions about whether law school and the legal profession are right for you. You may be wondering how to proceed.

You are in good company. Even the strongest, most savvy applicants experience some uncertainty and more than a little trepidation as they set out. I have had ample opportunity to hear from many for whom the admissions process and legal education worked out the best. Most have told me that they wish they had had more understanding as they set out to apply: beginning with decisions about what to study in college, how to prepare for taking the LSAT, how to decide when and where to apply, and finally, where to attend once admissions offers were tendered.

Some of the more privileged applicants have access to experienced prelaw advisers and to friends who have navigated the process successfully, and even these still have questions. For those without this guidance, the admissions process can be daunting.

More than thirty years ago, I co-founded a group of admissions deans who designed a short panel discussion to impart our collective wisdom about the law school admissions process to prelaw students at our big feeder schools, and to gain insight into the applicant mind-set. Our panel discussion was designed to address misconceptions held by many potential applicants and missteps we collectively observed in the applications we considered. We addressed frequently asked questions in a coherent and organized way. I participated in this panel throughout my time at NYU and at Harvard. It worked wonderfully for applicants who attended, and our only frustration was that it was not possible to share it more broadly.

I have been inspired to write this book to share what I have learned from the students I have admitted, and some who were not admitted, about the anxieties and uncertainties they feel during the application process. Virtually all applicants, whether they have a knowledgeable prelaw adviser or not, feel somewhat bewildered or overwhelmed at times as they decide whether to apply, how to get started, what to emphasize, whom to ask for a letter of recommendation, what to say in a personal statement, and how to handle each step of the process. This anxiety and uncertainty is even more pronounced among students of color, women, those from non-college family backgrounds, those from immigrant families, and those from other groups not traditionally represented in the profession. By making the admissions process more transparent, I hope not only to provide guidance and reassurance to all applicants as you embark on this journey, but also to help level the playing field for those from groups whose access to advice and preparation for law school has been less than that of the average applicant. I hope to help all to get through the obstacle course, and many to the school of their dreams.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments

Introduction

Chapter One: Is Law School for You?

Chapter Two: When Should You Go to Law School?

Chapter Three: Preparing Your Case While You Are in College

Chapter Four: Preparing Your Case: The College Graduate with Experience

Chapter Five: The Law School Landscape

Chapter Six: Ranking the Law Schools

Chapter Seven: Deciding Where to Apply

Chapter Eight: Behind the Scenes in the Admissions Office and the Admissions Committee

Chapter Nine: The LSAT

Chapter Ten: GPA and Academic Record

Chapter Eleven: Letters of Recommendation

Chapter Twelve: Extracurricular and Community Activities

Chapter Thirteen: Work Experience

Chapter Fourteen: Personal Statement

Chapter Fifteen: Interviews

Chapter Sixteen: Diversity and Affirmative Action

Chapter Seventeen: After the Admissions Decision

Chapter Eighteen: The Financial Picture

Chapter Nineteen: Finding Your Match in the Legal Profession

Epilogue Some Final Thoughts

References

Index

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