Thursday, June 16, 2011

LSAT FAQ's

The LSAT is the official admissions test for all ABA-accredited law schools in the United States. It is the most important factor in law school admissions. It is considered by many to be the most rigorous and difficult standardized examination in the American collegiate system. The LSAT is composed of six 35 minute sections, two logical reasoning sections, one reading comprehension section, one analytical reasoning (logic games) section, one ungraded test section, and a writing sample.


What is the hardest section of the LSAT?
This really varies individually. In my experience everyone is different, but students will usually either struggle on logic games or reading comprehension mightily. Those students without significant and recent physical science, engineering, or mathematics course work such as humanities, political science, and philosophy have tended to struggle on logic games—experience with some type of quantitative reasoning seems to prepare students well for logic games. Conversely, those students from highly technical backgrounds such as science, engineering, and mathematics that have not read a considerable amount in varied topics tend to struggle on reading comprehension.

However, I feel that students will tend to focus too much on their “hard section” and neglect the other sections as a result. Because logical reasoning makes up half of the test, but is usually not a test taker’s “hardest section,” it is many times neglected and students miss many more points that they have to. Focus on the entire test.


How is the writing sample used by law schools?

Law schools understand that by the writing sample is generally not great evidence of an applicant’s writing ability—after taking the most strenuous test of your life, you are many times not in a great mental state to write well. Therefore, the writing sample is generally not used by law schools. However, a copy is sent to every school that you apply to.

If your personal statement is well written, schools may compare the writing sample to the personal statement to make sure you wrote it. Also, if you write leave the writing sample blank or write something like “I know you won’t read this” over and over, schools may be rather unhappy with you.


Can I take the LSAT as many times as I want?

No. You may only take the LSAT three times in a two-year period. This rule even applies if you cancel or do not show up to the test three times. However, if you can find a school willing to give you a waiver to take the test again, and submit this waiver to the Law School Admissions Council, you may take the test past the three times limit.


How much time should I allocate to prepare for the LSAT?

I would recommend taking three to five months of solid time to prepare for the LSAT. I personally would have scored around a 148 or so on the test originally, but improved to a 174 (99.5 percentile) average after four months of 2-5 hours of practice per day, five days per week. While this may sound excessive, I was able to get into one of the five best law schools in the country with my score and would have been able to get full ride scholarships at many, many schools in the United States. Every hour I spent studying was worth hundreds, if not thousands of dollars in lifetime earnings to me.

Taking a great prep course such as the BYU LSAT preparation course can greatly decrease the time you need to spend studying on your own. Working with skilled instructors that are able to identify your individual weaknesses and answer questions is a great boost in studying.


Can I improve __ number of points from my diagnostic test?

You have a great chance to do so if you prepare well. Diagnostics are more useful in identifying current weaknesses than estimating how high you can score. View diagnostics in this light and do not let them undermine your personal confidence. For example, I was only able to finish half of a logic games section the first time I attempted one (and only got 8 or so problems right). Nevertheless, after a month and a half of practice, I was able to finish logic games sections 10 minutes early and rarely ever missed any points.

Set a goal and work toward it, prepare intellegently, and have faith in yourself. Instead of seeing LSAT improvement in terms of points, view it as different skill sets and knowledge you must gain in order to improve. There is no magic in LSAT improvement. You must simply identify personal weaknesses and improve upon them. I believe that it is within the abilities of most students to get a 170 or above on the LSAT

6 comments:

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  5. Before giving SAT MATH test you must clear your math concepts it is very big issue and can create regents prep problem for student so must solve this in start. If you don’t know how to prepare this then arrange s tutor. How we can increase points in SAT MATH.

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  6. Thanks for this wonderful blog, it’s really helpful. Also, I was wondering if you could point out a Best LSAT Prep Course. I find logic games bit more challenging than reading comprehension and did find a great book called "LSAT logic games unlocked 2018-2019" by KAPLAN.

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