Ben and Nathan explain that for Yale, Harvard, and Stanford, the holistic review only matters after you clear the high GPA and LSAT bar—and with Erica’s strong resume, they ask the real question: why law school at all?
Your studying needs to reflect the realities of the official test. Overemphasizing or avoiding section types won’t translate to success on test day.
Nathan and Josh highlight the resources included with a Demon Live account and how to use them effectively.
Ashley is concerned her resume lacks legal experience, but a quick review shows she has strong overall work experience that doesn't require a legal internship to be competitive.
Your letters of recommendation and personal statements need to reflect your skills. The goal is to demonstrate why you will be a successful law student and, eventually, a successful attorney.
Going to a school with strong employment outcomes for the right price can outweigh even the prestige of a T-14 designation.
Specialty programs (like a certificate in aviation law) are marketing ploys that don’t translate to improved employment outcomes.
Gaining legal experience isn’t just about enhancing a resume. It’s about discovering the legal career that you will truly enjoy, if law is the right path for you at all.
Solving questions, reviewing your mistakes, and using the ask button are the best teachers. Lessons and other Demon resources are there to supplement questions, not to serve as prerequisites to drilling.
When you take an intuitive approach to conditional logic, the questions become straightforward and clear.