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Your Main Strategy
Your main strategy will be to focus your application on things you may not have a lot of. It depends on what kind of courses you took outside of your artsy major and, if applicable, artsy minor. Focus on research-heavy courses that show you can handle the kind of work you'll be asked to do in law school. You'll also have to spend some time explaining why you're switching interests so radically. After all, while it's fairly common to hear of lawyers turning away from law to pursue more creative endeavors, it is rarer to hear of a creative arts major veering sharply towards the law school path.
Take heart: Your artsy major and minor won't bar you from getting into a good law school. In fact, if you play your cards right and frame your application correctly, it could actually work to your advantage. Remember, you're actually bringing something to the table that is fairly unique–a major that admissions committees rarely see. However, you're going to have to show the admissions committees that you can handle the type of work that you'll be asked to do in law school. Committee members will automatically wonder if you've got the chops for the high-level, intense academics required of law students.
Knowing What it Takes
You can prove you've got what it takes in two ways:
- Highlight research-heavy courses on your transcript. The best courses are typically social sciences and humanities. Why? They tend to be the most verbal and typically require a great deal of reading and writing. A good rule of thumb: If you had to write a lengthy research paper for the class (15-20 pages long) and it involved spending considerable time in the library researching sources, then it falls into the research-heavy category you're looking for.
- Have your recommenders focus on research-heavy attributes. Your ability to handle heavy academic loads, willingness to learn, and academic adaptability. This will work best if you can get the profs from the courses in point number one to write you letters, but you can also reach out to professors in your major and minor and ask them to focus on the things that law schools want to hear.
Explaining Yourself
You'll also have to spend some time explaining why you're suddenly switching academic gears. AdComs may be wary of giving a spot to someone that could potentially not use the education at all, particularly when they could give it to someone that has demonstrated an affinity in the subject. Reasons such as "my father is an attorney" or "I want to be academically challenged" will not, unfortunately, cut it for someone in your situation. Make sure to think long and hard about why exactly you're pursuing this course of action, and spend some time writing a statement of purpose that really highlights it.
A high GPA and LSAT score combination will be paramount for you. In your case, it's the LSAT that will carry the most weight. The LSAT is considered to be the predictor of academic performance during the first year of law school. If you do very well in it, and then combine it with solid letters of rec and a highlighted transcript like I mentioned above. It will go a long way to ameliorating the concerns of the AdComs.
Can you get into law school after majoring in [insert your creative arts major here]? Absolutely. Just make sure to preemptively address the concerns of the AdComs, rock out the LSAT, and spend some time ensuring your recommenders sing your academic praises, and you're well on your way.
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