<p>So in order for me to have any chance at getting accepted into Harvard Law, what do I have to do? What EC’s can a participate in to get noticed? What else would help?</p>
<p>Someone please help, I am having a hard time with this.</p>
<p>So in order for me to have any chance at getting accepted into Harvard Law, what do I have to do? What EC’s can a participate in to get noticed? What else would help?</p>
<p>Someone please help, I am having a hard time with this.</p>
<p>Wrong section of the forum, but I hope that your thread title was sarcastic. </p>
<p>Try [Law</a> School - College Confidential](<a href=“http://talk.collegeconfidential.com/law-school/]Law”>Law School - College Confidential Forums)</p>
<p>Actually, I was not. And that site you have given me is exactly where I derived my “sarcastic title” from. My sister’s stats have been posted on the Harvard Law pin board with a very high LSAT score and an exceptionally high GPA yet she was rejected. So obviously there are other factors that go into getting accepted into Harvard. They’re not going to except every genius.</p>
<p>Thanks for the help anyway,
good day.</p>
<p>billabongboy is right. While Harvard grad acceptance is not solely based on GPA and LSAT score, it is largely based on both. Don’t think you can even be considered without having both, unless your parents are multi-millionaire donors or you happen to be a nationally recognized figure.</p>
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<p>Actually, it pretty much is. EC’s matter a little bit, but nowhere near as much as GPA and LSAT. At some other law schools, such as Yale, EC’s matter more.</p>
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<p>How high? The reality is that unless someone comes from a completely unknown undergraduate institution, a 3.9+ GPA and 175+ LSAT make Harvard very likely.</p>
<p>It is absolutely based on LSAT and gpa.</p>
<p>Well I currently have a 3.9 GPA as of today, I finished my last classes! And I plan on scoring 172+ on the LSAT with hard work. My sister held a 4.0 and score a 172 on the LSAT. from my understanding this is fairly good, correct me if I am wrong.</p>