Pre-Law Professional Program

New College of Florida students participate in Mock Trial in a beautiful classroom.

Since our founding, hundreds of New College graduates have successfully pursued legal careers. Our exceptional fearless learning and forward-thinking academic program, along with dynamic experiences outside the classroom, offer New College students the perfect mix of skills and preparation needed to pursue law school. Our Pre-Law Professional Community helps connect pre-law students to special programs, activities, experiences, and preparation that sets them apart from other law school applicants. Through personalized pre-law advising and career coaching, students in the Pre-Law Professional Community have the professional and peer support to achieve their goals.

Join the Pre-Law Professional Community!

Pursuing law school? Please email pre-law advisor Richard Izquierdo. and join the Pre-Law Professional Community!

Top Law Schools that Accepted New College Graduates

Top 15*Top 25*Top 50*
Columbia UniversityArizona State UniversityBoston College
Cornell UniversityBoston UniversityCollege of William and Mary
Duke UniversityEmory UniversityFlorida State University
Georgetown UniversityGeorge Washington UniversityGeorge Mason University
Harvard UniversityUniversity of California-IrvineIndiana University
New York UniversityUniversity of FloridaOhio State University
Northwestern UniversityUniversity of MinnesotaUniversity of Alabama
UCLAUniversity of Southern CaliforniaUniversity of Arizona
University of California-BerkeleyUniversity of TexasUniversity of Colorado
University of Michigan University of Georgia
  University of Illinois
  University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
  University of Washington
  University of Wisconsin
  Wake Forest University

*Law school rankings in the 2021 edition of U.S. News and World Report

Preparing for the LSAT

The Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) is a half-day test offered four times a year: February, June, October and December.

If you are serious about going to law school, as a general rule, time spent preparing for the LSAT will have a greater return on your investment than time spent on nearly any other academic project, be it eight class assignments, finals or even thesis work.

The LSAT is, on average, 60 percent of what law schools take into consideration in determining admission — for a school like New College where we don’t have a GPA, this figure is presumably even higher.

Every reputable law school requires that you take the LSAT. Almost all of those students accepted at the top 25 law schools have LSAT scores which place them in the top 90 percent (or above) of all test takers. While it is difficult to get into a top law school without a high LSAT score, you should take some comfort in scoring anything above average on the LSAT. Working on improving your LSAT score should be at the top of your priorities.

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