Hate ads? Verify for LSD+ → Learn More

CosmicLynx '24–'25

The dream: Federal Clerk, gov/PI

Stanford University 1–4yr WE
LSAT 176
GPA 3.93
Softs T3

About & Wisdom

Background

Work Experience
government

Application Profile

Softs
research award, student gov leadership, various internships
LSAT Prep
LSAT Demon

CosmicLynx's wisdom

My top 5 takeaways:

  1. Apply early
  2. You probably can’t game HYS
  3. Be explicit about what you want your LORs to talk about
  4. Sign up for webinars with your CAS email
  5. Free resources work

1. Apply early: I can’t identify why I was WLed at each school, but I expect timing had something to do with my Michigan and UCLA WL. I put a whole lot more effort into those apps than I did my November ones.

2. You probably can’t game HYS: SLS was my dream school. I genuinely spent a month writing and editing my supplements. I went to 4 or 5 webinars they hosted, had an LOR especially addressed to SLS, and am planning my career around a topic area they’re very strong in. By comparison, I wrote my YLS supplements in a day, didn’t have anyone review them, and submitted my application without reviewing it as a whole (would not recommend doing that, I just didn’t expect to get in).

3. Be explicit about what you want your LORs to talk about: I asked all my LOR writers to write me a letter before I developed any of my app materials. Didn’t send them a resume or anything. From talking to them later on, I realized there were some inconsistencies between my application materials and what they said. I think the biggest blunder was the letter from my thesis advisor. I assume he wrote about my interest in X when my application was mostly about my interest in Y. While they overlap, they’re still distinct topic areas. Luckily, I wrote my YLS 250 about topic X (my thesis topic) and tied themes from that statement into the rest of my app, so I assume that helped me a bit there.

4. Sign up for webinars with your CAS email: I created a separate email address to sign up for CAS, which I would recommend, but make sure you use that email when you’re signing up for webinars, independent of LSAC forums. I used my personal email in some instances and realized that schools didn’t have a record of my attendance in those cases because they track communication through email.

5. Free Resources Work: One thing that immediately stood out to me at YLS was the number of people who knew other students currently at YLS/HLS/SLS from undergrad and received guidance on their applications from them. If you went to anything other than a stellar undergrad, you probably don’t have this same access (I certainly didn’t). I relied heavily on Spivy (podcasts, blog posts, and book (book was $50)), 7sage (podcasts and blog posts), Navigating Law School Admissions podcast, and A2Z with Dean Z podcast. Finally, I found Reddit incredibly helpful. I wouldn’t recommend following it while you’re waiting for your decisions, but it can answer a lot of miscellaneous questions while you’re preparing apps. Remember, there’s a search function, so whatever question you have has probably already been asked. (Also, obviously, it’s not always right, so take everything with a grain of salt and try to find multiple verifications.)

Log in to compare these stats with yours. Log in
Applications
A/AT
Sent Feb 15, 2025
Interview Feb 28, 2025
Decision Mar 13, 2025
R
Sent Jan 02, 2025
Decision May 22, 2025
WL
Sent Nov 24, 2024
Decision Feb 11, 2025
WL
Sent Dec 21, 2024
Decision Mar 05, 2025
$105,000 A/WD
Sent Dec 01, 2024
UR Dec 03, 2024
Decision Jan 22, 2025
H/WD
Sent Jan 13, 2025
Decision Mar 10, 2025
WL
Sent Jan 20, 2025
Decision Apr 08, 2025
A/WD
Sent Dec 15, 2024
UR Jan 06, 2025
Decision Mar 31, 2025
WL
Sent Nov 03, 2024
Interview Dec 16, 2024
Decision Mar 17, 2025
$180,282 A/WD
Sent Oct 31, 2024
UR Nov 12, 2024
Decision Jan 02, 2025
A Accepted AT Attending R Rejected WL Waitlisted H Hold D Deferred P Pending WD Withdrawn
Creep a rando