Law School Admission Test

LSAT

The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is standardized test taken as a part of admission process in US, Canada as well as certain developing countries. This test is conducted four times each year at certain predesignated testing centers throughout the world consuming almost half a day of the test taker. It provides a standard measure of acquired reading and verbal reasoning skills that law schools can use as one of several factors in assessing applicants. There are certain countries as United States, Canada, the Caribbean, and some other countries where the law test is taken on Saturday. This is except for the month of June, when it is generally administered on a Monday. For Saturday Sabbath observers, the test are also conducted on a weekday following Saturday administrations in certain countries many law schools require that the LSAT should be taken in the month of December for admission in the winter session. However it is recommended that the test is taken earlier in June or September.

Information about the LSAT Exam:

The LSAT exam includes five sections and also includes one writing test. The scoring of the test is only based on four sections which are reading comprehension, analytical reasoning, and two logical reasoning sections. The fifth section i.e. the writing section is a variable section and is an unscored section and it is sent to the school in which student takes admission. The test is objective type thereby, all the sections of multiple-choice questions. 35 minutes is given for solving each section. The total number of questions sum upto 101. The reading section includes 27 questions, while the analytical reasoning section consists of 25 questions. There are two logical reasoning sections; both of them consist of 25 questions each. The variable section or the writing section consists of about 25 questions. Initially raw scores are given on the basis of your attempt to correct answers. Then the raw scores are graded and converted on a scale of 120 – 180.

Also percentile score is given with other scores. The wiring section is not evaluated. It is imaged and sent as it is, to the law colleges.

The LSAT exam is an important exam for your career. Therefore, you should take it seriously and prepare will for the test.

The test includes five sections in paper of 35-minutes. These sections consist of multiple-choice questions.

Among the five questions, only four are considered for testing. The unscored sections include variable section, and the writing section, which is administered at the end of the test. The variable section placement may vary in test every time while the writing section also is of 35 minutes LSAT does not score the writing sample, but copies of the writing sample are sent to all law schools to which you apply.

What the Test Measures:

The LSAT test is all about testing the skills which are required so that you can have success in the law field. This testing by the way of test included the reading and comprehension of complex tests with accuracy and insight: the organization and management of information and the ability to draw reasonable inferences from it; the ability to think critically; and the analysis and evaluation of the reasoning and arguments of others.

Pattern of Examination:

The three multiple-choice question types in the LSAT are:

Reading Comprehension Questions:

This section tests your ability to read by understanding the concept and its insight. It includes examples of lengthy and complex materials which are generally encountered in law school. This section comprises of four sets of passages followed by five to eight questions that test reading and reasoning abilities.

Analytical Reasoning Questions:

These questions check your ability as to how well you can understand and draw conclusions about the relationships structure. You are asked to reason deductively from a set of statements and rules or principles that describe relationships among persons, things or events.

Analytical Reasoning Questions reflect the kinds of complex analysis that a law student perform in the course of legal problem solving.

Logical Reasoning Questions:

This section is clearly based so as to test the student’s compatibility to the law career. For success in this career, he needs to analyze deeply, critically evaluate, and come to a conclusion. Hence for this, in the test, there is a passage which is followed by a question which is well designed to assess wide range of skills involved in thinking critically with an emphasis on skills that are central to legal reasoning. These skills include drawing well-supported conclusions, reasoning by analogy, determining how additional evidence affects an argument, applying principles or rules, and identifying argument flaws.