Here is some information on the law school application process:
http://lawschool.about.com/od/applicationprocess/u/Applications.htm
Realistically, you are limited to applying at the 4th tier law schools.
No, college and law school (at least in the United States) are two different things. A student is required to have a attended college before applying to law school. Typically college is 4 years and law school is 3 but those numbers can depend on majors, etc.
All students applying for admission into a law school in Canada or the US must write the Law School Admission Test. It is generally referred to as the LSAT (pronounced el-sat).
If you're in the US, the classes you take in high school will not matter for law school. You will not have to report your high school classes or grades to the law schools you are applying to. You will have to send your undergraduate transcript to law schools. You would be well advised to take classes that are challenging but that you enjoy. You do not need to have any specific major to get into law school. So if you take classes you like, you will do well in them and will get good grades, which will improve your chances of getting into law school.
You can find a list of law school application deadlines on the websites of individual law schools or on centralized application services like LSAC (Law School Admission Council) for applicants in the United States or the Ontario Law School Application Service (OLSAS) for Canadian applicants. It's important to check specific deadlines for each school you are interested in applying to.
A student would have to first attend an Undergraduate college before they could ever apply to an Ivy League (or any) Law School. The caliber of the school may play a factor in admissions but, more importantly, the student would have to get high grades and perform well on the Law School Admission Test before applying for post-graduate Law School admission.
Law schools typically look at how you do in undergraduate courses instead of high school ones. Still, this does notmean that you can slack off in your high school studies, but how well you do in high school will matter more when applying for undergrad schools than law schools.In high school, as long as you do well in your online courses, you'll get into a good college. This in turn will boost your chances of getting into an excellent law school.
www.law.harvard.eduif you're thinking of applying I'd imagine they'd turn you down if you can't even find this out on your own.
If your received grades, yes you should include it. It will show your academic ability. You don't want to file an incomplete application.
If your sister is looking for a grant for law school, she needs to talk to either her University or college, or her local bank or credit union- these places would most likely be able to help her.
The LSAT stands for Law School Admission Test. It is designed to level skills necessary for a career in law and there are three multiple choice question types. These types are reading comprehension, analytical reasoning, and logical reasoning.
common law