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<p>Well, if you have data to prove that point, please bring it forward. Meanwhile, take a look at Law School rankings and their 25 - 75 percent range G.P.A. and LSATs. Clearly there is a strong correlation between these two stats and their all-so-precious final rankings. Grad deflation/inflation is said to be more of a factor at other graduate school pursuits, but I don’t know that for a fact.</p>
<p><a href=“http://www.top-law-schools.com/rankings.html[/url]”>Law School Rankings;
<p>It’s a numbers game at Law Schools and law schools are playing that game. For example, Georgetown will only allow their undergrad students with a great G.P.A. to get accepted into their law program (prior to graduation and without taking the LSATs). What happened to a more holistic approach? Why exclude lower G.P.A. candidates? Why not understand that a Georgetown student with a double-major in Arabic and Physics may have to work harder to get a 3.7 than a comparative literature major with a 3.8? Because they don’t care. They want to accept students that bring a great G.P.A. to their numbers WITHOUT hurting their LSAT number. They’re playing the law school mambo to scratch above some other law school or stay above another. This isn’t to pick on Georgetown, it’s the reality that kids interested in law school need to know.</p>