<p>Please tell me if a C will hurt your chances in getting into a good law school if you recieved it in your junior year in college. The first two years (especially the first year) grades were generally in the A range. </p>
<p>Also if you (or someone you know) got into law school with a C during their junior year in college, please let me knoiw. Thanks.</p>
<p>give up now. quit all your life goals and aspirations. The only industry I am aware that accepts graduates who get C's is...wait there isn't one. I'm sorry, you always have the lottery to rely on.</p>
<p>thescholar it mostly just matters on your undergrad GPA as a whole (throughout every semester not just one single class)...look at the ranges of the schools that you are targeting and you can see where your GPA needs to be and then you can simultaneously figure out how badly one c hurts your chances. if you were getting mostly all A's though through your first two years, one C is not the end of the world</p>
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Please tell me if a C will hurt your chances in getting into a good law school
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<p>... obviously it will. C's are worse than A's. Will it single-handedly sink them? Of course not. Will it be completely ignored? Again, obviously not.</p>
<p>It was in a very hard class. Calculus II. I didn't withdraw because I already got a w in my physics course, so I didn't want to get another one. Does the dificulty of the class matter</p>
<p>A little, but in any case Calc II is a pretty common class among college students. A "very hard" class is going to be something like advanced quantum mechanics or differential equations.</p>
<p>Law schools are filled with math phobes. If you apply to law schools, they'll be more concerned about your GPA than a low outlier, and more concerned with your LSAT score than your GPA. </p>
<p>In any event, there's no point in worrying about what you can't change. Spilled milk, and all that.</p>