Important Tips for LSAT Success

Let the Median Be Your Guide -  For a general guide, you can look at the profile of your intended school’s most recent class of students.

Seek Out Schools -  To target scholarships, seek out schools where your CAT is above their 50th percentile LSAT and your GPA is above their 50th percentile GPA.

Doing the Splits -  If you have trouble finding target schools where your LSAT and GPA are both high in comparison to medians, you may be a splitter.

Commit Yourself –  You should make sure that you have made every effort to increase your LSAT score before you commit yourself to an application cycle splitting in your favor.

Ranking or money— or both? -  Facing an entirely different decision, some applicants, who have both the highest LSAT and highest GPA, will decide whether to turn down full-ride scholarships at higher-ranked schools with little or no scholarship money to do or not.

LSAT Math -  Calculating debt-to-income and debt-minus-scholarship-to-income math can be complicated but LSAT math isn’t—it’s a simple addition.

The Offer Doesn’t Have to Be the End -  What if you, like Blueprint Prep Judy, got several great offers? You may be particularly money savvy and want to squeeze out a few more pennies by encouraging a little friendly competition.

It Depends, and Test-Takers Depend -  It depends in part on what school you want to go to and in smaller parts on what GPA you have and on how well you put together your application packet.

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