<p>Hello!</p>
<p>I'm currently a junior at the U of Washington in Seattle (hello to any Huskies who will read this!). I'm majoring in Political Science and Sociology and right now I'm not sure if I should graduate early - or not.</p>
<p>I did some practice LSATs and I did do an actual LSAT through Kaplan as well. I scored above the 160s in my practice LSATs and I scored 165 with my Kaplan LSAT. It was free, that's why I took it. I'm not sure if this is any indicator as to what my real LSAT score will look like but maybe this info will be helpful.</p>
<p>So, I'm currently a junior. If I were to take classes at my local community college or university during Summer quarter this and next year, I would graduate next year, in 2013.</p>
<p>I thought about doing that and taking the LSAT this year in June and then possibly re-taking it in October .. but I'm not sure if that would be a good idea. I'd be planning to apply to Law Schools this November. </p>
<p>My cumulative GPA is a 3.57 so far but that GPA is from my community college.
My UW GPA from my first quarter is a 3.15. I think GPAs will be combined though.</p>
<p>So - should I take the risk and graduate early? </p>
<p>And also: I saw that most Law Schools want 2 letters of recommendation - could I ask two professors at my community college for that? Or should I ask two professors at my university?</p>