As my cycle winding down, I would like to share my preparation and the result for the benefit of future Taiwanese applicants.
1. Applied Schools and results:
Harvard (WL)
NYU (Reject)
Columbia (Reject)
Berkeley (Reject)
Penn (Reject)
Michigan (Early Action; Reject)
Northwestern (Defer)
GULC (Reject)
UCLA (WL)
WUSTL (Acceptance with $$)
I applied to most Top 20 school, which don't require TOEFL.
2. Personal Profile:
GPA: under 3; LSAC give me an "average" evaluation. Actually, no GPA is showed in my JDCAS report.
LSAT: 168, 96%.
LOR: One from graduate school teacher, one from colleague, one from superior.
Soft factors: 5 years working experience in one of the top Taiwanese branding company; among which, 3 years was spent in Europe.
3. LSAT Preparation:
a. My first prep test score is around 155. Unlike most Taiwanese student, Game is my weakness. I can hardly finish the game section. Even when I strategically only complete the first 3 section to have more time per section, my hit rate is still low.
Powerscore help me a lot in this regard. I review every game meticulously to identify and memorize the key deduction required to crack the game.
b. Powerscore also is useful on the analytical reasoning sections. The most important factor, however, may be still solid reviewing. I actually collected all the questions I erred on, and find time to re-do them to make sure that I am familiar with the logic.
c. Vocabulary: I take note of every single word I don’t know and try to memorize them.
d. Prep test: since LSAT is a high time-pressured test, to take prep test under real test condition is essential for you to adjust your test-taking tempo. For myself, originally I only can complete 23 out 26 analytical reasoning questions. By reducing the time spent on easier question, and avoiding stuck at hard questions for too long, I increase the number of questions completed, while maintaining the hit rate. You may also want to notice the game is become much easier in recent years, while reading and analytical reasoning become harder.
In addition to the time pressure, doing prep test also help you to get used to the heavy mental processing loading the test require. In the beginning of my preparation, my brain slowed down considerably after two sections. By taking 4 to 5 prep test a week for 5 weeks, I eventually managed to finish the whole test without slowing down.
4. Online Resources:
You would like to check out some chinese website to download previous tests, and other preperation stuffs.
For general discussion of law schools, and advices and examples on personal statement, I will recommend www.top-law-schools.com.
5. Conclusion:
For international students, LSAT does play a decisive factor. One or two points difference may decide if you are admitted or waitlisted, or may decide if you get half-ride or full-ride. However, as showed in www.lawschoolnumbers.com, people with the same LSAT and GPA may fare quite differently in the same cycle, applying early, personal statement and other soft factors do also play a pertinent role.