The LSAT is a five-section, multiple-choice, standard-scored
"aptitude" test, followed by a 30-minute writing sample. Taking the test requires
3 hours and 25 minutes, not including rest breaks and the time needed for the
distribution and collection of test materials, as well as other test center
procedures.
The five multiple-choice sections, containing a total of about
120-130 questions, are separately timed at 35 minutes apiece, with a brief (usually
10-15 minutes) break in between the third and fourth sections. There are three
different question-types:
Reading
Comprehension--Typically, a section of this type will include about 26-28
questions, arranged into four sets, each containing a passage followed by 6-8
questions.
Analytical
Reasoning--Also called Logic Games of the "matrix" type, they typically
come in sections containing approximately 24 questions, arranged in four sets
of analytical problems or "setups" with 5-7 questions apiece.
Logical
Thinking--Typically, a section of this type will include around 24-26
questions that are not for the most part grouped into sets.
One section of both Reading Comprehension and Analytical Reasoning
and two sections of Logical Reasoning questions are used to produce your LSAT
score; a non-scored section, that can be of any type, is included in each test
but cannot be identified as such while you are taking the test.
The LSAT score is a three-digit number ranging from 120 to 180,
determined by the number of correct answers on the four scored sections, generally
covering a total of about 96-104 questions.
LSAT scores are not absolutes: a 180 does not necessarily mean
that every question is answered correctly (you could have as many as 2-3 incorrect
answers on the four scored sections and still have a score of 180), nor does
a 120 necessarily mean you answered every question incorrectly. Generally, you
will need approximately 15-17 correct answers before your score moves above
a 120. Once you reach that "threshold," each additional correct answer will
help raise your score with, roughly speaking, about two points gained for every
three additional correct answers.
While the four scored sections used for each administration
of the LSAT are most likely to be the same for each test at every test center,
there are different editions in which the non-scored section is not the same
and the order in which the scored sections appear will vary. After the five-section,
multiple choice test has been administered, and after a second short (c. 5 minutes)
break, the writing sample will be administered. The writing sample is unscored;
however, copies of your sample will be sent to each law school to which you
apply.
There is a great deal of confusion about the meaning
of correlation-study results. Correlations are reported on a scale of -1.0 to
+1.0, with -1.0 representing a perfect inverse relationship--as one measure
goes up the other goes down--and +1.0 representing a perfect positive relationship.
The national correlation between LSAT scores and first-year grades tends to
be around +0.4. By comparison, the national correlation between undergraduate
and law school grades tends to be around +0.25. The correlation for both variables
combined is approximately +0.5.
The relationships among LSAT scores, undergraduate grades,
and law school grades are all fairly strong, particularly when one considers
all of the many and varied personal factors that have an impact on performance
in law school--factors that include study habits, determination, work or family
obligations, quality of instruction, and many, many others.
The LSAT is used to make admission decisions, not to explain
performance variance. These two purposes are very different.
The bottom line is that the LSAT, although limited in its
utility, is the single strongest numerical predictor of success in the first
year of law school that is available to an admission committee when admission
decisions must be made.
2. The LSAT is biased against test takers who cannot
afford expensive coaching courses.
LSAC strongly counsels candidates to familiarize themselves
with the test format and question types in order to perform at their best. This
does not mean that expensive coaching courses are necessary to maximize students'
performances. The well-publicized claims of huge score increases from commercial
coaching courses typically compare students' unprepared performance to their
performance after a course. They do not compare the results a student could
achieve through self-study, or other less expensive alternatives, to coached
results. Moreover, it is likely that the subset of test takers who take commercial
courses differs from the general LSAT population in some as yet unknown ways,
thereby making generalizations from their results problematic.
What we do know is this: most LSAT takers do not take a commercial
course. In 1996-97, for example, slightly less than one-third of all test
takers reported that they had taken a commercial coaching course. This number
is consistent with other, independent measures of coaching-course volumes.
White test takers are slightly more likely to take a commercial coaching course
than black test takers, but both proportions are close to the overall average--35
percent of white candidates reported having taken a commercial course compared
to 28 percent of blacks. Moreover, the difference in mean LSAT scores between
those who did and those who did not take a commercial course is about 1 point
on the 120 - 180 LSAT score scale.
3. If you take the LSAT a second time, you'll boost your
score by three points.
On average, candidates who take the test a second time
earn scores 2.7 points higher than their first scores. But this number is an
average--many test takers achieve greater gains and many test takers actually
earn lower scores. For example, among those repeat test takers who earned a
150 on their first LSAT in a recent test year, 628 earned a higher second score,
51 earned a second 150, and 211 earned lower scores. Coincidentally, the average
score gain for all test takers (2.7 points) is equal to the standard error of
measurement for the LSAT, although these two numbers are not related.
4. LSAT scores and undergraduate grades equal merit
The LSAT is a helpful tool, but it has limits. LSAC
long has urged schools to take a variety of factors into account when making
admission decisions, and most schools do. Yet schools that place undue weight
on test scores and grades are engaged in misuse of those measures, just as the
opponents of affirmative action over rely on test scores and grades to make
their legal arguments. The LSAT measures only a limited set of skills that relate
to success in law school. The list of other factors that play a role is nearly
endless. The challenge for admission policy makers is to identify the qualities
that they seek in a student body and then gather information about those qualities
from their applicants. There is no entitlement to a seat in law school, regardless
of one's test scores and undergraduate grades.
5. There is a meaningful difference between scores that
are one or two points apart.
Admission decision makers who face the difficult task
of admitting only a fraction of their applicant pools necessarily search through
files to find factors that will tip the scales. This is particularly true once
the bulk of decisions have been made and the remaining files are those for which
there may be no truly distinguishing factors in the files, and no clear right
or wrong decision. At this point, it may be tempting to place great significance
on LSAT score differences of one or two points. Such reliance is misplaced.
LSAC recently began reporting LSAT scores with confidence bands around them--bands
that typically range from three points below to three points above the actual
score. The bands are meant to be a visual reminder that LSAT scores, like all
test scores, have measurement error associated with them, and to encourage score
users not to place undue weight on differences that have very little statistical
meaning.
6. Some LSAT forms are easier than others.
Each LSAT form is written to a common set of test specifications--specifications
that describe both the content of questions and the distribution of questions
across the spectrum of difficulty levels. Each scored LSAT question is pre-tested
twice--once to gather data about how the item functions on its own, and a second
time as part of an intact test section. Data from these pretests allow LSAC
to 'equate' each LSAT form. Equating is a statistical process through which
the very slight differences in difficulty across LSAT forms can be mitigated,
thus allowing direct comparison of results from different tests. Therefore,
a December 1998 LSAT score of 150 means the same thing as a 150 from the October
1995 administration, or from any administration since June 1991.
7. The LSAT is graded to a curve, so your score can be
influenced by the other test takers with whom you test.
Some candidates mistakenly believe that they will be graded
on the LSAT in relation to others who take the test with them. In fact, all
LSAT scores are equated back to the original base form, given in June 1991.
It is possible, although extremely unlikely, for everyone taking the test
on the same day to earn a score of 180. Effectively, an individual test taker's
performance is compared to the performance of all test takers since June 1991,
except those taking the test at the same time.
8. There is little or no research that supports the use
of the LSAT.
Since 1990, LSAC has produced more than 75 research
reports touching on the performance of the current test or potential designs
for a future LSAT. All of these reports are sent to LSAC-member school libraries
and are available free-of-charge from LSAC. Numerous external researchers also
have made use of LSAT data, publishing their findings in refereed journals.
The LSAT is the single best numerical predictor of first year
performance in law school, that the LSAT is superior to undergraduate grades
as a predictor of law school success, and that the two measures when combined,
are superior to either one standing alone.
The LSAT seeks to measure not what you already know but, rather,
how well you might respond to training in law, so it goes after your basic skills
and abilities along certain lines.
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