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| Law School Admission Test - LSAT |
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| Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is a graduate entrance exam conducted by Law School Admission Council (LSAC) for admissions into All American Bar Association approved law schools and Canadian law schools. |
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| Application Procedure |
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| The LSAT is administered four times in the months of June, September, December, and January each year at authorized testing centers throughout the world. Applicants can access LSAC’s official Web site for online registration i.e. https://os.lsac.org/. |
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| Structure of the Test |
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| The LSAT test has five separate sections, spanning for 35 minutes each. One of them is an unscored section, the scores of which are not included in the applicants’ final score. The last section is a writing sample and is not scored by the LSAC, but is submitted to all the law schools to which you apply during the admissions. The other three sections have multiple-choice questions assessing reading comprehension, analytical reasoning, and logical reasoning. |
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| The LSAT is aimed to assess applicants’ competence for success in law school, which includes comprehension of complex texts and drawing conclusions after proper reasoning and arguments. |
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| Conclusion |
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| The LSAT is an attempt by LSAC to help law schools make accurate admission decisions while identifying prospective law students for their schools. The test is only one of the elements in the selection process but ensures that it is a fair and fit measurement instrument to select potential law students |
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