Choosing one of three good options

<p>Im a senior in high school, and to describe my 4 years is simple. Great grades at times not so great at others. I spent all of high school expecting to major in computer science then after taking a programming class at a community college i realized i hated it. I always have loved law and politics and am currently dual enrolled at the same college taking poli sci class. I know that im going to law school after college because thats what i love doing. My dad was a lawyer for a while and i loved his life he had. I applied to 3 schools Maryland, towson, and st. Johns in annapolis. Maryland declined me unsurprisingly. So now my choices are St. Johns which has only one program that when i visited i loved or towson which has poli sci which i love. Community college is another choice. Im stuck between the three. St. Johns and towson are great fits for me but if i go to community college i can transfer anywhere maybe even into my dream school, Maryland. if i choose towson or community then i will deifnatly look into transfering. I loved towson but i feel like not trying one more time for maryland would be a mistake but devoting my life to going there would be a mistake too. Which path to law school do you think i should choose and do you think its possible to get into a t-14 from one of the options i said? Undergrad is important to me but a prestigious law school is my dream because i want to one day run for office and law school helps. Thanks for any responses guys!!</p>

<p>Law school admissions are mostly about LSAT scores and GPA in college.</p>

<p>[Welcome</a> to LawSchoolNumbers.com | Law School Numbers](<a href=“http://www.lawschoolnumbers.com%5DWelcome”>http://www.lawschoolnumbers.com) may give you some idea of what kind of LSAT scores and GPA are needed at the top 14 law schools.</p>

<p>Note that the LSAT contains a logical reasoning section, which may be why physics, math, and philosophy majors tend to do well on it. No specific major or course work is required for law school, although majoring in engineering or science (but not math, statistics, astronomy, geology, or non-ABET-accredited computer science, unless one takes a specified amount of physics, chemistry, and/or biology courses) is helpful if you want to go into patent law.</p>

<p>Which CC are you looking at? Some of them are excellent. If your grades are very good, and the transfer advisor is on the ball, you are correct that transferring up is quite possible. At the very least, you will save a chunk of money for the first two years. Pay a visit to the CC and chat up the transfer advisor so that you have a clear idea about your options. </p>

<p>Full disclosure: Happykid graduated from Montgomery College, Rockville before transferring to Towson. She wouldn’t trade her experience at either campus for anything.</p>