The LSAC Punitive Grade Policy: Why Your F Will Never Disappear
The Law School Wake-Up Call
You are a senior preparing to apply to Law School. You look at your official university transcript, and your Cumulative GPA is a solid 3.7.
You feel confident. You take the LSAT, pay the fees, and submit your transcripts to the Law School Admission Council (LSAC), the centralized system that processes all law school applications in the United States.
A few weeks later, LSAC generates your official Academic Summary Report. Your LSAC GPA is not a 3.7. Your LSAC GPA is a 3.3.
You have just fallen victim to the most brutal mathematical rule in graduate admissions: The LSAC Punitive Grade Policy.
What is a Punitive Grade?
When you were a freshman, you failed an introductory History class (F). You retook it your sophomore year and got an 'A'. Your university used "Grade Forgiveness" to delete the 'F' from your official GPA.LSAC does not care about your university's internal rules.
If an 'F', 'WF' (Withdrawal Failing), or 'U' (Unsatisfactory) appears anywhere on your transcript, and it carried a 0.0 weight at the time it was issued, LSAC considers it a Punitive Grade.
LSAC will take that original 'F', strip away the grade forgiveness, and mathematically average it against the 'A' you got when you retook it. Your final grade for those combined credits is effectively a 'C'.
The "No Credit" Trap
The policy is even harsher for Non-Punitive grades that you think are safe.If you take a class Pass/Fail, and you get a "No Pass" or "No Credit" (NP/NC), you need to look at how your university defines it.
Before you apply to law school, you must manually run your entire transcript through an LSAC-specific calculator. Your university GPA is a fiction. Only your LSAC GPA determines your admissions fate.
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