Blueprint LSAT Blog: Letters of Recommendation
Uh, Where’s My Law School Letter of Recommendation?
“It’s in the mail.” As undergrads, you know what that means: You blew your cash on alcohol and need an extra week or so to scrape funds together to cover your rent. It’s the same when a professor tells you this for your law school letter of recommendation (they do, after all, drink very expensive
READ MOREPlaying the Game: Getting the Perfect Letter of Recommendation
I once taught a guy who was a real ladies’ man. During the class, I saw him hit on a girl using a logical reasoning question. That takes skill. Much more skill than I was taught during my Blueprint training. He’d shamelessly walk up to anyone and start flirting. I grabbed drinks with him a
READ MOREHow Not to Get a Letter of Recommendation
Asking for a letter of recommendation can be a harrowing experience. First, you have to find someone who you think would even be remotely willing to write anything positive about you, which can be a difficult proposition in and of itself. Then, you have to sit down in a meeting and actually ask for it.
READ MORELetters of Recommendation and How to Get Them
This is a post from our friend Anna Ivey over at www.annaivey.com. She’s a law school admissions expert and former Dean of Admissions at a top ten law school, so her site is a great resource for anyone applying. “You’re so beautiful, you could be a part-time model.” That’s Jemaine from Flight of the Conchords,
READ MORELaw School Letters of Recommendation II: For the Old Folks
I don’t know about you (although I am intrigued: what’s your name? How did you hear about moststronglysupported? Do you like horchata? Have you ever been to Delhi? If you could only speak using phrases from a single song for the rest of your life, which song would you pick and why?), but I feel
READ MOREGetting Good Law School Letters of Recommendation
If you’re planning on applying to law school this fall and have already taken the LSAT, you should be working on everything else now; getting letters of rec., writing your personal statement, explaining how that 1.9 GPA from your first quarter of school was from a “family illness.” If, however, you’re taking the LSAT this
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