What Pre-Law Blueprint Looks Like

Pre-Law Blueprint is a multi-year architecture: every semester, internship, course, and research project chosen and sequenced so that your eventual application is dramatically stronger than the one you would have built on your own.

Below is a redacted sample of a real Blueprint deliverable set. Names of specific people, offices, courts, and organizations have been generalized or shown as bracketed placeholders.

1. The Multi-Vantage Plan, at a Glance

Every Blueprint starts with a single map: how each thing you do connects to your narrative and to the research that makes you distinctive.


2. The Plan Memo

The overview document. It lays out potential workstreams for the next one to two years and how each one feeds the eventual application. Every guide that follows is a deep dive on one piece of this memo.


3. The Internship Placement Guide

A mapped set of every placement worth pursuing, including defense-side, civil legal aid, judicial, and the faculty relationships that support them, with a specific, named target and a reason for each. In the real plan, the bracketed items are actual offices, judges, and organizations selected for the client.


4. The Thesis & Research Guide

How to produce original research as an undergraduate: the pathways (thesis, independent study, RA, and how they stack), a ranked faculty roster built around your specific topic, a bank of jurisdiction-specific research questions, and a tiered guide to presenting and publishing your work.


5. The CASA Volunteer Guide

A complete walkthrough of becoming a Court Appointed Special Advocate: the full application pipeline, the time commitment, how to sequence it around your eligibility window, and why this specific role was chosen for this client’s narrative.


6. The Community College Courses Guide

The strategic way to raise the GPA law schools see (CAS GPA) using A+ courses, with the full set of rules, cautions, a verification checklist for every course before you enroll, and the mistakes that are irreversible once they hit your LSAC transcript. The real plan names specific institutions.


7. The Outreach Email Template

A short template for reaching out to offices and organizations, plus tactics to get a response, leading with a warm introduction and using your campus network.


Is Pre-Law Blueprint right for you?

Pre-Law Blueprint is for students who are a year or more from applying and want their entire candidacy built strategically, not accidentally. The earlier you start, the more it is worth.

Reach out here →


Frequently Asked Questions

Who is Pre-Law Blueprint for?
Undergraduates who are one or more years from applying to law school. Sophomores and freshmen benefit most, because the plan needs runway to work. First-semester juniors can benefit, too, but second-semester juniors are usually ready to start on the application itself.

How is this different from regular pre-law advising?
Most advising tells you to get an internship and study for the LSAT. Blueprint builds the whole candidacy: which placements, which courses, which research, which faculty relationships, and how they all feed one coherent application narrative.

Are these real client documents?
They’re a redacted version of a real deliverable set. The structure, reasoning, and depth are exactly what a client receives; specific names of people, offices, and organizations have been generalized or withheld.

Do I have to do everything in the plan?
No. The plan is a menu built around your goals and your field. We prioritize together based on what’s realistic and what strengthens your narrative most.

When should I start?
As early as freshman or sophomore year. The value compounds: the more semesters you have left, the more of the plan you can actually execute before you apply.


Need help with your full application?

I work with a limited number of applicants each year on resumes, personal statements, other essays, overall strategy, etc. Reach out here →