Published by Roma Rahul Gupta for Chhattisgarh Online
LSAT: Law School Admission Test
LSAT: Law School Admission Test
LSAT exam is mandatory for getting admission in those Law Schools of USA, which are approved by ABA (American Bar Association). LSAT is also compulsory for getting admission in Law courses in most of the Canadian Law Schools and many of the non-ABA approved Law Schools too. LSAT is conducted four times a year at selected centers all over the world. LSAT helps Law Schools make sound admission decisions by providing standard measure of verbal and reasoning skills of the students. The Law schools can use LSAT score as one among the few other features in evaluating the candidates for admission.
The LSAT precisely comprise of five sections namely,
• Reading comprehension section.
• Logical reasoning (arguments) section.
• Analytical reasoning (games) section.
• Experimental section (another Arguments, Games, or Reading Comprehension).
• Essay section or writing sample section.
The Experimental section will be games, arguments, or reading section. You will not know which is the real section and which is the experimental one, so you must just try your best on every single section. The good news is that if at some point you have a strangely difficult section that makes no sense, there|s a strong chance that it was the experimental section. There is also a writing sample or essay section. The writing sample does not count towards your score, but the law schools to which you apply will receive a copy of your essay to evaluate. The duration of the test is about 3.5 hours. There is no negative marking as such, but you are expected to attend all the questions. After your test is graded, your score will be converted into an LSAT score ranging from a low of 120 to a high of 180. Your score and hence your percentile will roughly follow along a bell curve pattern, a score of 150 is an average one, and 170 is the 99th percentile.
Books: LSAT Prep Tests, Master The LSAT by Jeff Kolby and Scott Thornburg.
Website: http://www.lsac.org
The LSAT precisely comprise of five sections namely,
• Reading comprehension section.
• Logical reasoning (arguments) section.
• Analytical reasoning (games) section.
• Experimental section (another Arguments, Games, or Reading Comprehension).
• Essay section or writing sample section.
The Experimental section will be games, arguments, or reading section. You will not know which is the real section and which is the experimental one, so you must just try your best on every single section. The good news is that if at some point you have a strangely difficult section that makes no sense, there|s a strong chance that it was the experimental section. There is also a writing sample or essay section. The writing sample does not count towards your score, but the law schools to which you apply will receive a copy of your essay to evaluate. The duration of the test is about 3.5 hours. There is no negative marking as such, but you are expected to attend all the questions. After your test is graded, your score will be converted into an LSAT score ranging from a low of 120 to a high of 180. Your score and hence your percentile will roughly follow along a bell curve pattern, a score of 150 is an average one, and 170 is the 99th percentile.
Books: LSAT Prep Tests, Master The LSAT by Jeff Kolby and Scott Thornburg.
Website: http://www.lsac.org
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