Law school with poor science grades hurting GPA?

<p>I have been premed at a top ten university for the last two years, but after doing shadowing and an internship have decided that medicine probably isn't for me. Also, I have gotten two C grades and two C+ grades in organic chemistry and math. Other than that I have pretty good grades, my GPA is at like a 3.35. I'm double majoring in bio and history with a minor in chem. I worry about the C's, will law schools black list me for them when my other grades are good? Plus the pretty intense major and minor. I have good EC's and leadership if that makes any difference. I'd just like to know what I need to do, I don't have a lot of experience with this. Thanks!</p>

<p>Law schools tend to be very unforgiving about bad grades. Generally, they look at your cumulative GPA and nothing else. A 3.35 isn’t that bad: It will probably shut you out of Harvard, Yale, and Stanford, but anything else is possible if you earn a very good LSAT score.</p>

<p>Well thats more positive than I had feared.</p>

<p>Well, a 3.35 isn’t a great GPA by any means. It just means you’ll have to work super hard on the LSAT. A high LSAT score will overshadow your crappy GPA. Mind you, some law schools are GPA whores though, like UC Berkeley and UCLA. Getting a 167+ will get you into a decent school, and a 170+ can get you a chance at some of the lower T-14s</p>