<p>Well, nobody can chance you without your actual LSAT score and final GPA. What I will say is that getting 170+ is no easy feat, and many don’t accomplish that goal. However, given that you do have 170 on LSAT and 3.4 GPA when you apply to law schools, you stand a chance with lower T-14. </p>
<p>Northwestern, for example, requires 2-3 years of work experience. As long as you have some work experience and 170+ on LSAT, you can get in with ED, despite with a pretty terrible GPA. (even GPA lower than 3.2-3.3) </p>
<p>University of Virginia is also a definite possibility, because they’re pretty flexible about your GPA and splitter-friendly, as long as your LSAT is 170+. I know a kid with 3.2 GPA / 171 LSAT who got into University of Virginia.</p>
<p>Outside of these two law schools in T-14, expect a lot of waitlists if you do end up with 3.4 GPA + 170 LSAT. However, you would still stand a decent chance at University of Michigan and Cornell with those stats.</p>