<p>Hey I will graduate with a 3.7 and I have a 2190 on sat and I have good ecs , but I don't know what college I want to go, I want to major in pre law minor in sports management or business, I would to go to a socially active school I want to party a lot .!!!!! But please give me ideas</p>
<p>“I want to party a lot .!!!”</p>
<p>Law school admission is heavily numbers-based. You will need an excellent GPA, an excellent LSAT score, and good letters of recommendation. If you “party a lot” you may find that you don’t end up with the grades, etc. Think that through pretty carefully before you commit to a party lifestyle in college.</p>
<p>Law school is obscenely expensive, and there are very few scholarships available. You will almost certainly need to pay for it yourself either with your family’s money or with student loans. There is absolutely no guarantee that you will be able to get a good paying job after graduation and passing the bar. Sit down with your parents and talk about the money. If you are truly committed to a law career, you may want to be headed to an undergrad college or university that is happy to throw a lot of money at you because of your current GPA and SAT score. Pay a visit to the Financial Aid Forum, and read up on places that offer guaranteed merit-based aid.</p>
<p>Wow thanks a lot</p>
<p>1- There is no “pre-law” major. Major in whatever it is that interests you. If this were a major you can actually get a job in after graduation, all the better. If you decide not to attend law school or put it off, then you can have a career in something else.</p>
<p>2- Check out your state schools (in-state) for the best costs. Also, apply to some private schools where you are in the top 20% or better of applicants and hope for merit money. They higher your stats for those schools the better. </p>
<p>3- There is plenty of merit money for law school applicants if you are in the top 25 percentile. Schools are competing for those kids to attend their schools and pull up their stats and rankings. Law school tuition can be costly, but the program is cheap to run (few professors and many students) so they have lots of money. (Taken from a NYTimes article a year or so ago.) Law school acceptance is based heavily on GPA and LSAT test.</p>
<p>4- [Browse</a> Law Schools | Law School Numbers](<a href=“Recently Updated J.D. Profiles | Law School Numbers”>Recently Updated J.D. Profiles | Law School Numbers) site gives you great info on stats and merit. Handy when you are a college Jr/Sr and searching for law schools.</p>