Law School Calculators | LSAT Tips

LSAT Tips

Information, Resources, & Guides To Help You Ace the LSAT

468x60-LSAT-Coursesbanner

Law School Calculators

So what are your chances of getting into Law School X?

While a number of soft or hard factors factor into your actual individual odds of getting into a particular law school, the most accurate and standard way to figuring out your odds is by utilizing a law school calculator. Law School Calculators take into account your LSAT and GPA scores and compare them with the LSAT and GPA scores of admitted students to then determine your odds of getting in.

Remember, that your own personal achievements, work experience, extracurricular activity, sexuality, and race may also play a role in the admission committees decision.

But anyhow, we’ve gathered the best law school calculators online here to help you calculate your own odds of getting into your list of law schools.

Law School Admissions Calculators

Law School Probability Calculator

(http://www.hourumd.com/)

Rating: ★★★½☆ 

The Law School Probability Calculator is a free tool that utilizes self-reported GPA, LSAT, and URM (underrepresented minority) status from the Law School Numbers database.

Simply enter your LSAT, GPA, URM status and select whether you would like to view reported scholarship information as well as wait list information and the tool pulls the self-reported numbers of admitted candidates to the top 100 ranked law schools.

The tool returns a chart listing the school name, the percentage of admitted candidates with your same statistics, the percentage of admitted students with lower numbers, and the percentage of rejected students with better statistics.

Overall, the calculator is a good tool of grasping your own odds without digging through each profile on Law School Numbers.

Official LSAC Undergrad GPA vs. LSAT Score Search

(http://officialguide.lsac.org/UGPASearch/Search3.aspx?SidString=)

Rating: ★★★☆☆ 

LSAC provides a free calculator tool for you to enter your undergraduate GPA and LSAT score and compare your statistics to the latest full-time entering classes of all ABA-approved law schools. The results will appear in a graphical band that represents the 25th/75th percentile range of the uGPA and LSAT scores of admitted students. This graph will also mark where your own numbers appear in the list.

While the LSAC’s tool is limited in the amount of your personal information it takes into account, the calculator does span a far larger list of schools and is still helpful in finding law schools that you will be competitive for during application time.



Related Articles From LSATTips.com:


One Response to “Law School Calculators”

  1. Remember not to ever limit yourself. Several men and women limit themselves to what they think they are capable to do. Bear in mind that you can certainly go as far as your imagination lets you.

Leave a Reply