Applications for the 2010 - 2011 academic year will be accepted beginning on September 1, 2009. Each applicant whose file is complete by March 1, 2010 will receive a decision letter postmarked no later than April 6. An applicant whose file is not complete by March 1 cannot be guaranteed a decision by April 6, though we make every effort to give a decision by that date.
Applicants whose files are completed by December 31, 2009 will receive full consideration for merit-based scholarships. Application files completed after December 31 will be considered for merit-based scholarship assistance to the extent funds remain available. After the first round of scholarship awards, which occurs around mid-February, scholarship notification can be expected two to three weeks after admission.
While we do encourage applicants to complete their applications by December 31 in order to be eligible for merit scholarship consideration, this is not a hard deadline. We typically make our initial round of scholarship decisions in mid-January, and at this point in the admissions cycle, we have our entire scholarship budget at our disposal. We will continue to make scholarship awards throughout the coming months, however, we have less money with which to work with each successive month. Consequently, as this analysis indicates, the chances of you receiving a scholarship award are much better the earlier you complete your application, but it is nevertheless possible to receive a scholarship even if you do not complete your application until after December 31st. As with many other aspects of the law school application process, the sooner you can complete your application the better.
We encourage you to consider the application process the beginning of your legal career. Law school is a professional school, and you should strive for absolute professionalism in each and every contact you have with any admissions office. Whether it be an email, a phone call, an individual visit or a conversation with a school representative at a law fair, impressions matter. In one email, one phone call or one conversation, you have the potential to dramatically impact your file's consideration. Such contacts can often prove critical when schools make admissions decisions, particularly when choosing whom to accept from their waiting list, and bad impressions can often be extremely difficult to overcome. For more about our general expectation of professionalism for all applicants, please read our recent blog post on the subject.
The application for admission to Washington and Lee Law for the fall of 2010 is currently available on LSAC.org. Electronic application through LSAC is required. We know that these are challenging financial times for a great many people, and we don't want an application fee to preclude you from applying to W&L Law. Consequently, we have made the necessary arrangements with the Law School Admissions Council (LSAC) so that no fee will be assessed when you apply electronically via LSAC. For this admissions cycle, applying to W&L Law will be free of charge.
International J.D. applicants who received an undergraduate degree from a college or university in the United States or Canada should refer to our webpage for International J.D. applicants.
Applicants are strongly encouraged to review our application instructions before beginning the application process. Furthermore, as you begin to assemble the various constituent parts of our application, please consider these recent blog posts:
I am wondering just how competitive my application might be. Can you provide me with a preliminary assessment of my likelihood of admission based upon my numerical credentials?
At W&L Law, admissions decisions are more than a simple formulaic assessment. Our Admissions Committee does not use an admissions formula, and applicants are not ranked by any numerical index. We consider undergraduate grades and transcripts, LSAT scores, recommendations, significant employment or post-graduate educational experience, extracurricular activities, special skills and talents, community service involvement and the personal statement. Consequently, due to the holistic nature of our review process, we are unable to provide any preliminary assessment of one's potential admissions decision or scholarship award without reviewing her complete file. LSAT score and/or GPA are simply not enough!
Applicants interested in the numerical qualifications of the students we admit and those who choose to attend W&L Law are encouraged to review the statistical profile of our most recent admissions season (available in the ABA - LSAC Official Guide to ABA-Approved Law Schools) and the median qualifications of our most recent class.
I am taking a later LSAT administration. How should I handle the submission of my application?
Admittedly, from cycle to cycle, this is a fairly common predicament. Applicants seem to think that there is something wrong with submitting their application before their LSAC file is complete with transcript(s), LSAT score and recommendations. Please don't worry - sending us your application before everything else is teed up is fine. Waiting? Well, that's less fine.
As a general policy, with all application matters, sooner is almost always better. Consequently, if you're taking a later LSAT, we encourage you to submit an application now, and begin sending along the various constituent parts of your Credential Assembly Service (CAS) report (detailed above) to the LSAC. By doing this, your file will be complete (and therefore eligible for review) much sooner than if you wait until you receive your results to begin the application process or to submit other required documents to the LSAC. Even if you're simply awaiting the results of an LSAT administration, we encourage you to go ahead and submit the completed aspects of your file. If you choose to re-take the LSAT, do not worry. Simply notify our office of your plans (email is preferred), and we will place a hold on your file.
If you've previously taken the LSAT, do not worry that we might somehow review your (technically complete) file before we receive your new LSAT score. Simply provide us, in Section I, Item 8 of our application, the date of your future LSAT administration, and we'll hold your file for review until we receive scores from that test. If you change your mind, (and decide not to sit for the test after all, or decide to sit for a later test administration) please contact us so that we can either remove the "hold" on your file or change the date on which we'll check for a new score.
Furthermore, we make admissions decisions on a rolling basis, and there is no early action program. Each year, we wait until we have a critical mass of applications to begin our review (so that we might have some perspective on the kinds of application we're seeing in a given cycle), and while each year is just a little different than its predecessors, we don't typically achieve this volume until November or December.
Notes on our consideration procedures:
Washington and Lee University is a community based on trust and respect for others. The quality of its life, academic and social, is shaped by the guiding principle of civility. Every member of the community is entitled to expect civil behavior from all other members. Students, faculty and staff have the right to be free from prohibited discrimination, harassment and retaliation within the University community. Specifically, the University prohibits discrimination, including harassment, on the basis of race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, age, disability or veteran's status in its educational programs and activities and with regard to employment. The University also prohibits retaliation against any individual who files a good faith complaint or is involved in a complaint process under this policy.
Contact us at LawAdm@wlu.edu