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The LSAT®
The
LSAT is no joke. You thought the SAT to get into college was tough?
Wait until you take the LSAT to get into law school. Not to
frighten you, but deciding to go to law school is a serious decision, and the
LSAT is one way to weed out those who take the matter lightly. The life of Ally
McBeal isn’t exactly what becoming a lawyer is all about.
Every American Bar Association-
approved law school requires the LSAT for admission. If you
want to go to law school in the United States, you must take the LSAT. It is
a required component of the application process, and a crucial one. Most colleges
weigh the LSAT as much as your undergraduate GPA, if not more.
This four hour, multiple choice test is considered as important as four years
of classes and studying at your undergraduate institution! No pressure, though,
right? Relax-- visit LSAT Test Prep
to get preparation tips.
About the Test
The LSAT
is a 101 question test with five multiple choice sections. The sixth section,
the essay portion, is not scored but is sent to the various colleges you apply
to.
The LSAT
consists of two logical reasoning sections, one reading comprehension section,
one logic games section and one unscored experimental section, which can be
any of the previously mentioned sections. The sixth section is the unscored
essay portion. The five multiple choice sections are each 35 minutes long, and
the essay portion is 30 minutes long.
But don’t expect to
finish the LSAT on
time. The test is designed so that the average person cannot comfortably complete
all questions in the allotted time period. So what can you do to make certain
you perform your best on the LSAT test? Practice improving
your pacing skills with THE
SILENT TIMER™. It is imperative
that test takers have the best pacing tools available in order to maximize their
scores. This is why we created a timer for practice AND a timer for test day.
Find out more about
The Silent Timer™ LSAT Package HERE.
Schools for Success
- Getting to the corner office has more to do with leadership talent and a drive for success than it does with having an undergraduate degree from a prestigious university.
Most college graduates in debt
- Nearly two of every three undergraduate students are going into debt to go to college, owing an average of more than $19,000, most often to the government.
Senator subpoenas SAT executives over errors
- A New York state senator has subpoenaed executives of the College Board over their refusal to release a report on scoring errors in the SAT college entrance exam.
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