Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Getting Started Take II - Getting Involved in Undergrad

So you’ve signed up online with LSAC , and you’re probably asking yourself what to do next? If you are in the beginnings of your undergraduate years, the answer is pretty simple: get involved.

Law schools love, aside from the 4.0 GPA and 175 LSAT scoring students, individuals who are involved in their university and community. They want law students who have a desire to be active and enjoy giving back. As a lawyer, you will be constantly working with community members, so any volunteer work you can do during your undergrad will add brownie points to your application. Along with extra-curricular activities and leadership positions on campus, any sort of resume booster can help give you the edge you need to come out on top of a student with comparable GPA and LSAT scores.

In the past few years, I have been vice president of my school’s Pre-Law Society, president of the European Studies Club, and member of Polyglots and the student newspaper. Whether I learned valuable negotiation tools at the European Union Simulations or worked on my writing skills with the bi-weekly student newspaper issues, all of these have helped to prepare me for law school in some way or another.

So get involved and stay involved.

1 comment:

  1. Agreed! The more involvement you have the more valuable experience you obtain.

    ReplyDelete