I got accepted for Fall 2010. These are the classes I took in my last 2 years:
American History (Honors)
English IV (Honors)
Physics
Chemistry
AP Macroeconomics (3)
AP Language/Comp (4)
Sociology (Dual-enrollment)
Religion (Dual-enrollment)
Speech (Dual-enrollment)
International Relations (Dual-enrollment)
US Government (Dual-enrollment)
Precalculus (Dual-enrollment)
Trigonometry (Dual-enrollment)
When I submitted my transcript to UF my GPA was 4.0 (unweighted) and 4.25 (weighted). I scored 1410/2110 on the SAT (730 Math, 680 Reading, 700 Writing).
These aren't the best stats or the strongest courseload, but I think the 1 year of Dual Enrollment and the SAT score are what helped me the most.
According to the LSAC guide to law schools, people who score at least 160 have a "good possiblity" of getting accepted into Emory. Your undergraduate grades and other factors will also be considered.
If your grades in ICOM are good then 6.5 bands and if grades are not good you have to go for a foundation course in ehich you have to score 6 bands in ielts
There are many factors that impact being accepted to college and differ based on the college being applied to. The basics are getting good grades, good test score and nice references.
IGCSE - grades C and above GCE - grades D above But it depends what course you're going for.. For some you need higher than those.
Not to intially get accepted but if you are accepted you can submit your scores as a way for them to determine what core classes you get into(math,english,etc) instead of taking FIT's placement tests
Study.
Generally speaking, law schools aren't terribly interested in what undergraduate subjects you studied. Law school is going to teach you a new way of thinking in any event. (It's true; this is not a joke.) Your grades and your LSAT score are probably the two most important factors in determining whether you will be accepted. For every qualified candidate who is accepted, there are usually dozens of qualified candidates who are not.
No, it is not. Grade can be a verb with distinct meanings (to score, to level) or a noun with the same general concept (a score, a level or level rise). It can be a noun adjunct in terms such as grade crossing.
Yes ... but you're going to have to shop around. You're not going to be in the first cut.
no
You should have a 28 to be accepted.
C and above anything below you won't get accepted.