пятница, 2 августа 2013 г.

Law School Acronyms, Jargon and Terminology

Law School Acronyms, Jargon and Terminology

Lawyers (and future lawyers) love jargon. It might seem like half the of the words on the law school forums are in code, so here is a list to help you understand law school lingo. We don’t promise learning any of this will make you cooler (in fact, it may do just the opposite), however, if you want into the legal world this is the entry level terminology you have to know to understand what people are talking about. Here is a list of law school, LSAT prep, and law school admissions acronyms to help you on your way:


0L – A law school applicant. This term comes from the standard law school system whereby first-year students are called “1Ls”, second-year students are “2Ls”, and third-year students are “3Ls”

ABA- American Bar Association. A voluntary association of lawyers who among other activities oversee law school accreditation

Adcomm – Admission committee/admission committee member

ASD – Admitted Students’ Day

ASW – Admitted Students’ Weekend

BarBri – A well known bar prep company

BC – Boston College

Bibles – PowerScore logic games, reading comprehension and logical reasoning study guides

BP – BluePrint (LSAT prep)

BU – Boston University

BPVM – Berkeley, Penn, Virginia, Michigan

CCN – Chicago, Columbia, NYU

COA – Court of Appeals

CLS – Columbia Law School

CSO– Career Services Office. Also often called the OCS (‘Office of Career Services’) depending on the school.

Ding – Rejection from a law school

EA – Early Action: a non-binding application whereby you apply early and get a decision by a specified date

ED – Early Decision – a binding application option whereby you apply early, hear back by a certain date, and you must attend that law school should you be accepted (though you retain the option not to attend law school at all).

E&E – Examples & Explanations. A series of primers covering various legal subjects you learn in law school. Frequently used by 1Ls as a to supplement to study for exams.

GMU – George Mason University

GULC – Georgetown

GWU – George Washington University

HLS – Harvard Law School

HYS – Harvard, Yale, Stanford

IP – Intellectual property

K– A symbol meaning ‘contract’

LG – Logic games, also known as analytical reasoning. One of the three section types on the LSAT

LLM– Master of Laws. Usually a degree for foreign students who have already taken the equivalent of a J.D. in their country. LLMs for Tax are commonly taken by domestic law students.

LOCI – Letter of continued interest, used to show a school that has waitlisted you or otherwise withheld your decision that you remain interested in attending

LOR – Letter of recommendation

LR – Logical reasoning. One of the three section types on the LSAT. Also stands for ‘law review’, a student run legal journal present at most schools that generally requires you to grade on by being among the top students in the 1L class.

LSAT – The Law School Admissions Test. A test required for admission to all ABA approved law schools

LSN – LawSchoolNumbers.com

NYLS – New York Law School

OCI – On-Campus Interview

PI – Public interest

PS – Personal statement or PowerScore, an LSAT prep company

RC – Reading comprehension

Socratic– Socratic Method. The method of questioning that law professors employ during class, where they ask you questions and guide you to the answer rather than provide it outright

SC– Supreme Court

SCOTUS – Supreme Court of The United States

SLS – Stanford Law School

T1 – Tier one schools according to USNWR (1-50)

T2 – Tier 2 (50-104)

T3 – Tier 3 (105-139)

T4 – Tier 4 (the rest)

T5 – The top 5 law school- confusing I know. T5 is better than all of T1 through T3

T14 – The top 14 schools, so called because they historically always rank in the top 14 of the USNWR rankings

TLS – Top Law Schools, a law school forum

TM – TestMasters (LSAT prep)

TTT – Third tier toilet, derogatory reference to 3rd and 4th tier schools. Also sometimes means ‘Top Tier Toilet’ a joke to imply that even certain tier 1 schools might have less than desirable job prospects

UCB – University of California, Berkeley

UG – Undergrad

U of C – University of Chicago. Our Alma Mater. Now more frequently referred to as ‘UChicago’

URM – Under-represented minority

USNWR – US News and World Report’s Law School Rankings

V10/V100 – The top 10 an 100 firms, as ranked by Vault

W&L – Washington and Lee

W&M – William and Mary

WL – Waitlist/Waitlisted

WS – Writing sample

WUSTL – Washington University in St Louis

YLS – Yale Law School

YP – Yield protect, a possible explanation for getting waitlisted when you are a very strong applicant for a school. They don’t accept you outright, assuming that you will likely attend elsewhere, so as to keep their selectivity lower (which helps them in the USNWR rankings). Writing a LOCI will often get you off the waitlist.


(Source: http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=18478 Credit for most of this list goes to a forum poster. Thanks for explaining all this terminology back when I was a 0L!)


This list is not exhaustive. If you run across anything that you don’t understand, please ask in the comments. Also, feel free to suggest additions if you see any glaring omissions. Thank you!


Original article and pictures take cdn.lawschooli.com site

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