GPA + LSAT needed for top 3, top 6, top 14 etc

<p>What GPA + LSAT do you generally need to have a realistic chance at Yale, Stanford, Havard. And same question for Columbia, NYU, Chicago, and then the top 14 in general. Also for schools just outside the top 14 (UCLA, USC, etc)</p>

<p><a href=“http://www.lawschoolpredictor.com/wp-content/uploads/Law-School-Predictor-Full-Time-Programs.htm[/url]”>http://www.lawschoolpredictor.com/wp-content/uploads/Law-School-Predictor-Full-Time-Programs.htm&lt;/a&gt;&lt;/p&gt;

<p>Thanks a lot </p>

<p>So i’ve been playing around with the calculator and it seems that high LSAT matters more than a high GPA. Is this generally correct?</p>

<p>Usually LSAT carries more weight. Some schools are known for weighing GPA more than the usual. Stanford and Berkeley are probably most GPA centered of the T14. For a school like UVA if your GPA is above 3.85, your LSAT can be a few points below the median and still get you in.</p>

<p>Top-law-schools.com probably covers just about everything, but beware some of the people on there are elitist and/or jerks.</p>

<p>HYS: 3.8+/173+
CCN: 3.5+/175+ or 3.8+/170+
MVPDNCGVand: 3.X+/170+
Schools just outside: 3.X+/168+</p>

<p>For an LSAT of 168 and GPA of 3.X you’ll need a shield to protect yourself from all the $$$$ that schools like Wash U will throw at you.</p>

<p>Is the LsAT/GPA ratio the importance of the LSAT relative to GPA? Like is a LSAT/GPA ration of 3 mean that LSAT is 3 times more important. </p>

<p>I’m talking about the LSAT/GPA ratio given by lawschoolpredictor by the way</p>