Other than the last point, I think this advice applies well to students who score around the 167-171 range and want to attend Harvard. They will need a compelling personal statement. Also, while the fact that they encourage students to talk about their LSAT score increase journeys might indicate an incentive to discover which students got accommodations, I think it’s reasonable for them to have a genuine interest in your journey, if you had such one. It’s certainly not uncommon for you guys to post about them, because they’re interesting. Think about 2 students with an LSAT of 174 and a 3.8 GPA, yet one just took it once, the other has a score of 148, and genuinely worked up to a 174 (through you guys!). Harvard likes that 👍
They can’t legally discriminate against you for anything, but if they choose to do so, then they have the right not to reveal to anyone that they did. 🙄🤷♂️
Other than the last point, I think this advice applies well to students who score around the 167-171 range and want to attend Harvard. They will need a compelling personal statement. Also, while the fact that they encourage students to talk about their LSAT score increase journeys might indicate an incentive to discover which students got accommodations, I think it’s reasonable for them to have a genuine interest in your journey, if you had such one. It’s certainly not uncommon for you guys to post about them, because they’re interesting. Think about 2 students with an LSAT of 174 and a 3.8 GPA, yet one just took it once, the other has a score of 148, and genuinely worked up to a 174 (through you guys!). Harvard likes that 👍
5:00 Anything you say can and will be used against you. Why bother self sabotaging? Who do you want to help? Yourself or the other?
lol “they don’t HAVE to discriminate against you for that”
They can’t legally discriminate against you for anything, but if they choose to do so, then they have the right not to reveal to anyone that they did. 🙄🤷♂️
Wait… there’s no more asterisks next to accommodated scores anymore??? 🤔