- Pick up and READ the LSAT/LSDAS Registration and Information
Book, available in S158 beginning
in March of each year. The same information is on-line
at the LSAC web site.
- When you register for the LSAT,
be sure to check YES in the appropriate box on your LSAT
registration form, which releases
your data to your pre-law advisor. We need this information
to help us advise and place students, and it remains confidential.
- The
best preparation is to take real LSATs under simulated (TIMED)
conditions. Take as many of the old exams
as possible.
Copies of the old exams can be purchased directly
from the Law
School Admission Council (LSAC) for a nominal fee. A sample
test is also provided for you in the LSAT registration booklet
and on-line at the LSAC web site.
- You
may wish to purchase study guides to help you in practicing
for the examination. A number of books
are available. None
are as good as taking the actual tests, but they can provide
you with additional vocabulary and questions to work on.
The best study guides are generally thought to be published
by
Barron’s, Kaplan's, and Princeton Review.
- You may wish to take
a LSAT prep course. Pre-law advisors disagree over the
usefulness of prep courses.
They can be helpful,
but they are very expensive. There is no one right answer.
Whether you should take a prep course depends on your individual
circumstances. In deciding whether to take a prep course,
you might wish to
consider the following questions:
- Can I easily afford a prep
course? If so, there is probably no harm in taking
one. Most people agree that
a prep course
will not hurt your score, and may help it. The question
is whether your score will improve significantly enough
to make
the course worth the money.
- Will spending money on a review course make me more
motivated to study, to get my money’s worth?
If so, you may wish to take the course.
- Can I afford it, but not very easily? If money is an
issue, you should ask yourself how committed you are to attending
law school and whether you consider this expenditure to be
an investment in your future. If you are willing to spend
the
money as an important investment in your education and your
future employment, then a review course may be for you.
- Are you self-motivated? If so, there is plenty of information
available to you for free on the web and in the library,
and you may not wish to spend the money on a prep course.
- How did you do on the practice LSAT you took under simulated
conditions? If you scored well, and your practice LSAT score
and GPA place you solidly within the admissions criteria
of the law schools that you wish to attend, you probably
do not
need to take a prep course.
If you do decide to take a prep course, the best ones are
generally acknowledged to be by Kaplan and Princeton Review.
- Do not go into the LSAT exam thinking that you can take it
more than once. It is better to do your best the first time,
and to undertake the exam with that mindset. You can retake
the LSAT, but all of your scores will be reported to the law
schools, plus the average of your scores. Some law schools
will only look at the average score; others want to see significant
improvement in the second score. We advise students to take
the LSAT again only if they are convinced that they will do
appreciably
better the second time.
The Law School Admissions Council recommends the following courses (no matter what your major) as ones to take in order to do well on the LSAT:
* In Philosophy: Critical Thinking (101) and Logic (201) classes (60% of LSAT is reasoning thinking)
* In English: Argumentative Writing (377) (20% of LSAT is reading and writing comprehension)
* In Political Science: American National Government (216) and Constitutional Law (320) (for content area)
* In Justice Studies: The Criminal Justice System (201) (for content area)
* In Philosophy: Introduction to Ethics (213) (an acute concern of law schools these days); and courses in the Philosophy of Law (PHIL 361C) and in Human Rights (PHIL 361P)."
* A Commercial LSAT Prep Course: Such as those offered by Kaplan,
Princeton Review, or Power Score. Take this course in the months just prior to taking the LSAT
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