<p>just from gpa/lsat, what would you say my chances are of getting into at least one of the t-14 schools?</p>
<p>Very low at Duke, Georgetown, Northwestern. Low at Michigan. Unpredictable at Berkeley, Virginia. Pretty good at Cornell.</p>
<p>Cornell and Boalt are you best bets.</p>
<p>thank you for your reponses :)</p>
<p>but why do you think my chances are what you say they are with cornell and cal? what's the source of your predictions?</p>
<p>oh and also if i apply to the lower 7 of the t14 schools, do you think that i will likely gain accepted into at LEAST one of them?</p>
<p>I would expect you to gain one admission (and specifically at Cornell), but I would not feel comfortable enough with this plan to tell you to only apply to those 7. I would apply to at least a few of the top 28 as well.</p>
<p><em>APPLY EARLY.</em> </p>
<p>I'm sending a PM your way.</p>
<p>I was using the graphs on lawschoolnumbers.com. You are likely to get corroborative information from LSAC.org's "LSAC Data Search" and from thinking carefully about US News's 25th percentiles.</p>
<p>obviously the GPA is good enough for even the top top law schools right? it is the LSAT that is holding the OP back? what would that lsat have to go up to to give him a good chance t14 cause from what i've gathered a 3.93 and a 172+ would give you a chance at the top top law schools like harvard</p>
<p>?</p>
<p>We've already said the OP has a good chance at the T14 -- specifically Cornell. So his 165 is fine.</p>
<p>hey again bluedevilmike lol..ya i know that but some of the other t14 like the ones into the t10 not necessarily the ones just breaking the t14</p>
<p>Okay. So if you want a top ten school, US News says we're talking about Duke and Virginia. A 168 is pretty comfortable for those two -- but that's from 2007 Data, which is rapidly becoming old.</p>
<p>If this is not your question, then actually ask your question.</p>