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What undergraduate grade point average (UGPA) is required for admission?

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What undergraduate grade point average (UGPA) is required for admission?

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Again, as with LSAT scores, no single answer applies for all law schools. There is a wide range of UGPAs among applicants accepted to ABA-approved law schools. In general, you should strive for a strong undergraduate GPA from a progressively challenging courseload. Your overall UGPA is as important to law schools as the kinds of courses in which you enrolled. Many law schools also examine your performance trend throughout undergraduate school. That means they may discount a slow start in a student’s undergraduate career if he or she performs exceptionally well in the later school years. Similarly, admission committees may see an undergraduate’s strong start followed by a mediocre finish as an indication of less potential to do well in law school. It would be to your advantage to comment in your personal statement about any performance decline or any dramatic turnaround in your performance, as well as any events in your personal life that may have affected your grades.

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Again, as with LSAT scores, no single answer applies for all law schools. There is a wide range of UGPAs among applicants accepted to ABA-approved law schools. In general, you should strive for a strong undergraduate GPA from a progressively challenging courseload. Your overall UGPA is as important to law schools as the kinds of courses in which you enrolled. Many law schools also examine your performance trend throughout undergraduate school. That means they may discount a slow start in a student’s undergraduate career if he or she performs exceptionally well in the later school years. Similarly, admission committees may see an undergraduate’s strong start followed by a mediocre finish as an indication of less potential to do well in law school. It would be to your advantage to comment in your personal statement about any performance decline or any dramatic turnaround in your performance, as well as any events in your personal life that may have affected your grades.

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