Plan for graduate admissions?

<p>I have a prior degree in political science from another university and want to earn a higher degree. However I have been out a couple of years and my GPA at the other school was reduced to 2.83 cumulative because I dropped my classes at one point to go into the army to pay off some debts that were negatively impacting my ability to concentrate on my studies.
I paid the debts off and left the military after 5 years. A year after leaving the military I finished the degree program but was not able to get above a 2.83 because my skills had rusted a little.
What I want to do is attend law school and recieve teacher certification in the social sciences. I am thinking of doing another BA or two just to prove I can succeed in the graduate program. Since I read they are concerned with how your past performance indicates how you will do in the grad programs.
A second BA would also enable me to get better recommendations. When I finished my PS degree I did not engage the instructors and it has resulted in some difficulty in getting good recommendations. This is probaby my primary concern. Since I know that the GPA is only part of it. The rest is the GRE, resume, and recommendations. I can probably do pretty good on the first two but the latter would be almost impossible at this point. </p>

<p>the degree I am considering is history plus a second major or minor in a foreign language since those would seem most useful for those wanting to go into teaching. </p>

<p>What do you think?</p>

<p>If your intention is to attend UT law, I would strongly suggest you do your second BA elsewhere. As for the major choice, I would suggest you try something besides History so as to widen your skill set - for example, you may try economics - A Government/Economics double major is pretty common at UT Austin. Since you already have the degree in Political Science (or Government as they call it at UT), it would be in your best interest to diversify and try to get a degree in another area besides History.</p>