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Helping You Apply to Law SchoolWhen people ask, "What do you do?" I usually answer, "We get you into a better law school than you could have gotten into on your own, where you have a significant chance of actually being happy." We have standard fees and schedules for this work.
After visiting more than 120 law schools in almost 100 cities, we know the law schools, and can tell you how the schools and cities you're reading about compare to others. We know our clients, and compare you to others in your situation. We know the applicant pool, and can tell you how to distinguish yourself from others with whom you might be directly compared. This information can help you to target the right schools, as well as to write essays that will distinguish you from other applicants with whom you might be compared. We know the admissions officers, and can use that knowledge to answer specific questions as well as to allay your fears. Giving the school what it wants is the easiest way to increase your chance of admission, and knowing what it wants is an essential part of that process. We know the applications, which helps us catch mistakes and steer your answers in the right direction. An accurate application form is reviewed more favorably and (almost as important in spring waiting season) more quickly. None of this knowledge is a substitute for a good academic record, a competitive LSAT score, or a carefully compiled file. It is a valuable addition to these factors, assuring that you will apply to the schools that most want you, and that you will present to them the factors in your life that they will consider assets. It is frequently the difference between an acceptance and a rejection at the schools for which you are a discretionary applicant.
Guaranteeing you the best application possible requires careful attention to every step of the application process. Here are the highlights of the process. General InformationAs soon as you sign your contract and send your payment, you'll receive written materials explaining our approach to choosing law schools (and writing essays telling the schools why you've chosen them), preparing resumes and essays, and completing applications. As we continue through the process, you'll receive information on attending law forums, applying for financial aid, answering correspondence from law schools, and lining up your 1L summer job. Getting AcquaintedMeeting each client is the best way I've found to facilitate working together. A first-hand meeting answers many unvoiced questions and gives a sense of personal style that cannot be gained by phone, fax or e-mail. Each client must make every effort to meet with me at a Law Forum (for which there will be no extra charge) or at another mutually convenient place (which may incur travel costs). Clients choosing to complete Early Decision applications must meet with me before their personal statements are completed (usually before the Law Forum season). Choosing Law SchoolsChoosing the best law schools for you requires an investment of time and effort on both of our parts. We'll each put in about four hours on the initial phases of choosing schools. You'll then spend many more hours requesting catalogs and cruising web pages. Once I understand what you want from a law school (and you know your LSAT score), I will recommend a number of law schools that seem to meet your needs, consulting my data base (which contains over 500 fields for each school), my interview sheets (with 15 years' data collected at Law Forums), and my personal knowledge (gleaned from site visits of over 130 law schools). We'll discuss the list together in depth, fleshing out the statistical data with my impressions of the law school and its surrounding community, and prepare a list of ten to fifteen law schools that will meet your needs. Recs and ResumesWhile you're waiting for your LSAT score and applications to become available, we'll begin the important process of choosing your recommenders and revising your resume to fit law school specifications. These simple but important steps take only two to four hours of our time. You'll send me your transcripts from all the schools you've attended and your LSAC User ID and password, so we can review your work without the hassle of PDFs or snail mail. We'll review these together to see who will write you the best recommendations, both in terms of content and in terms of showing a complete picture of you. We'll decide whether academic recommenders show the whole picture, or whether a work or activity recommender will counter a particular weakness in your file that needs addressing. We'll also decide whether you're sending the same recs to every school, or targeting special recs for certain schools. You'll send me your resume so that I can suggest revisions, highlighting the portions a law school admissions officer will consider most important. If you don't have a resume, we'll work together to decide whether you need one and help you to prepare it. Completing the ApplicationsIn addition to gathering information for each school we've selected, you'll begin working on the computerized application service offered by Law Services. As soon as you have an LSAT score (or when the program is available in September), we'll begin the process of preparing the applications. This important process takes two to four hours per school. You'll start by completing the Common Information section of the LSACD. Once we're sure that the basic information is correct, you'll complete one fairly complex application with several additional questions. I'll review the application to make sure the information you've given is what was wanted and proofread final copies of all your apps.
Essays
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| The essay package is the soul of your file. We will give it extraordinary amounts of time, to assure that we'll have extraordinary essays. Topic selection and editing of supplemental essays is an expected part of applying to law schools, and is included at no extra charge. |
Expect to spend at least twenty hours writing the 5-10 single spaced pages of material we need to begin. This material will come in the form of answers to the preliminary question in the Client Guide. We'll review your answers, and I'll ask further questions based on the particulars of your life. We'll repeat this process as often as is necessary to learn your life story.
With all of your answers in hand, I will review your entire file and indicate which pieces will be of interest to admissions officers and which should be omitted. If one or more of your answers to me clearly addresses the ideas needed, we will use it as the basis for your personal statement, editing and clarifying as needed.
In addition to a personal statement, many applicants will need a diversity statement, an explanation of a leave of absence, academic probation or arrest, or other essays requested by the law school. In many instances, the answers to these questions will already be part of your file. If so, we will retrieve and edit the relevant essays and polish them for the law school. If not, we will discuss the question together and explore topics so that you can prepare the needed essay.
If you have followed all the previous steps, you should not need any assistance from us at this stage. We've reviewed your application, verified the essays you need, and polished every piece of your file together. However, if you have questions, we're available to answer them for you even in the hours when folks seem to settle in to assemble files. Our regular office hours are extended until 10:00 p.m. Pacific time in December and January, so we're available when you're working on your file.
Financial aid applications, complaints about frustrating questions on the
applications, and nervous questions about when you'll hear are an inevitable
part of the application process.
| So, as you can see, we get you into a better law school than you could have gotten into on your own, where you have a significant chance of actually being happy. If you think that will be of value to you, contact us. |