As we know, LSAT is a mandatory requirement to get admission to a law school, where the competition is increasing drastically each year. For example, while considering Seattle University Law School, which is a popular law school, ranked 87th in the nation out of 187 law schools. Each year this university accepts around 500 law students for the first year. For the 500 seats, the school receives more than 7000 applications. Only about 20% of the students will be accepted, out of which only half of them would join.
Showing posts with label Law Schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Law Schools. Show all posts
LSAT Scores And Law Schools
Law schools consider many factors for their admission processes. The two factors that all candidates are judged upon are: previous academic performances or GPA and the LSAT score. LSAT scores released are expressed in three ways, Raw LSAT Score, LSAT Scaled Score, and LSAT score Percentile. Depending on the LSAT scoring system, the schools of the topmost ranks accept LSAT average scores as follows.
LSAT Requirement For Law Schools
Most law schools of the United States, Canada and Australia and all the law schools approved by ABA (American Bar Association) consider the scores of LSAT (Law School Admission Test) for admissions. Law schools consider LSAT as an important aspect of application and even allocate more weightage to LSAT scores than the GPA obtained.