<p>Need good letters of recommendation from 2 or 3 of your undergraduate professors too to get into a good law school. Their recommendation letters can make or break your chances for admission to a top law school. If your professors write that you have a bad attitude, or they think you are “pragmatically inappropriate” for law school, it’s lights out for you. Professors have keen memories… if they remember a student sitting in the professor’s class chewing gum wearing their pajama pants not paying attention in class while doing FaceBook on a laptop, or if they think you are in general a smarta$$…you’re not getting a good recommendation letter from the professor. If a professor knows your abilities and even temperment from working with you on research projects, or from special workshops, etc., you’ll get favorable recommendation letters. I know the recommendations I got from my professors are what got me into graduate school. Alex23 said she’s a lawyer, she was admitted to a law school, she has experience in what it takes to be admitted to a law school.</p>