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<p>Actually, you probably can’t. To get a work visa authorized the employer has to show an extraordinary need that a citizen cannot fill. This works fine in fields like Computer Science, where there aren’t enough coders to go around. Not so in law, where every year graduates outnumber jobs 2:1. If you don’t already have citizenship or have a path to get it, in all likelihood you’ll graduate law school only to have to leave for another country where that law degree will likely be useless. If you have EU citizenship maybe you can get into the UK. Firms there hire US-trained lawyers in their capital markets divisions. Otherwise law school probably isn’t worth it.</p>
<p>With a 3.6 (averaging your 3.9 and 3.3) and 154, the only worthwhile next step is to retake the LSAT. You need a score at the very least in the mid 160s. If you haven’t graduated and can still avoid doing so, now would be a good time to not graduate and go take some fluff courses to boost that GPA.Of the schools on your list, Irvine might be worth considering if they throw enough money at you. With your numbers however, that’s unlikely. Retake and reapply and that can change.</p>