<p>I grew up trilingual (English, German, mandarin; all of which I speak at home) and I was wondering if going to an international school would hurt or help me. My goal for the future is to attend one of the top 10 law schools in either the United States or the UK. As of right now I'm thinking of studying undergraduate law at Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich (in Germany) to save money because in Germany there is virtually no tuition cost. However since I am planning to attend a law school in an English speaking country, I am scared that this would hurt me in the long run (even though this is Germany's no. 1 law school according to various sources) because, well, I would not have completed my undergrad in English. My question is if it would make sense for me to go to Germany to study with a shining GPA and LSAT as well as joining a political party and excelling in model UN, or if it would be easier for me to get into a top 10 law school in the US/UK with a diploma from the University of Texas at Austin (BA in Psychology) with the above mentioned extracurricular/academics. Another question I have is if it would be possible for me to be admitted to one of the top 10 law schools in the US/UK with a bachelor in law from a non English-speaking university.</p>
<p>You can get into law school with a foreign undergraduate degree, you just need to pass an English fluency test on application to US law school. US law schools won’t care about model UN/German politics. More important questions leap immediately to mind: Why would you want both a foreign and US law degree? Do you have US citizenship or a means to get it?</p>