<p>Yeah, you say pre-law, and that leaves you still with a list of 400 schools, plus all of the schools that don't offer pre-law but will prepare you well.</p>
<p>WE need stats, demographics, and preferences.</p>
<p>Well...a broad list of all of the following would fit, since its pretty vague:</p>
<p>The Ivy Leagues, Stanford, Duke, Williams, Swarthmore (bio is strong), Amherst, Georgetown (IR and law, dunno about bio), Northwestern, and JHU (IR is their biggest major, suprisingly)</p>
<p>However, those are like the 15 top schools, so to give you better advice we'd need some more info, but otherwise aim for some of those</p>
<p>ANY college will prepare you for law school. If you want to investigate colleges that aren't that well-known but offer a good education, check out liberal arts colleges. </p>
<p>I suggest you buy or borrow the Fiske guide and do some research - figure out what you want in a college.</p>
<p>I wholeheartedly agree with the last poster. There are no specific colleges or specific majors to go to for law school. As a practicing lawyer, I always counsel students to major in a subject that really interests you and that you will do well in. Go to the best school you can. I was a graphic design major, my husband (also a lawyer) was an anthropology major, and I have colleagues that were psychology majors, economics majors, etc., etc. The best preparation will be for you to take classes that will make you a better writer. Good luck.</p>
<p>thanx a lot for the advice on law school (and fiske's guide)</p>
<p>im really gald to hear that LACs might b a good option 4 me coz i really like their teaching style.</p>
<p>blackeyedsusan - your advice is great and i'll definitely concentrate on writing a in college (no matter which major i choose) coz i like it and its one of my strengths</p>