<p>As of now, Georgetown might be a potential option if you score high on the LSAT. Many of the T14s, including Georgetown, are out with 3.5 and your predicted 168 if you are not URM.</p>
<p>I think the best course of action is to study hard for the LSAT while delaying graduation if you think you can improve you GPA by staying in college longer. I recommend this for two reasons. First, LSAT is the single most important factor in law school admissions. It is different from standardized college entrance exams. Therefore, you can do better on the LSAT than you did on the SAT, percentile-wise. Studying hard for the LSAT can never guarantee a good score, but it can certainly help. Second, the LSDAS GPA is the second most important factor in law school admissions. If you can raise your GPA to 3.6 or 3.7, then Columbia, UChicago, and NYU could be potential options with a high LSAT score. Since your LSDAS GPA can’t be changed after you obtained your first bachelor’s degree and since graduating early is often detrimental to law school applications, staying in college to increase your GPA would be a smart move, if you think you can pull that off. Good luck.</p>