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<p>In most majors, it does not, not for undergrad. Engineering is an exception (and I would say business, too).</p>
<p>OP, some top law schools - including Harvard - publish a list of the colleges represented in their most recent class. [Here’s</a> Harvard’s](<a href=“http://www.law.harvard.edu/prospective/jd/apply/undergrads.html]Here’s”>http://www.law.harvard.edu/prospective/jd/apply/undergrads.html). In addition to some very top/selective schools, there are also colleges like CUNY Baruch and Brooklyn, Clemson, Eastern Michigan, Excelsior College, Drew University, Fairleigh Dickinson, Fairfield University, Florida International, Marymount Manhattan, Olivet Nazarene University, Patrick Henry College, Touro College, University of Delaware, Weber State University and Warren Wilson College. Some of the colleges on the list I’ve never even heard of. There are 172 colleges and universities on the list.</p>
<p>So you can go to a top law school from any kind of school - you don’t have to go to a top-ranked, elite college/university to do that.</p>
<p>I would say that Fordham is a match, not a reach. Your test scores are in line with what they want (except the lowish math, but that’s only one section) and the rest of your stats are way over the average Fordham student, I would think. I’d put NCF in the low-match pot, personally - same with Earlham and Hendrix. You’ll probably get in, but your stats are about even with the average admitted student - not way over.</p>
<p>Other suggestions are Bard and Skidmore (both low reaches/high matches, I think), Ithaca College (low match to safety), American University (match, a tad more pre-professional but still pretty good for humanities), Colby College (reach).</p>