Otherwise known as the Law School Admissions Test, the LSAT is a standarized exam the results of which are required for admission into most law schools in North America. LSAT results are currently only required from applicants to J.D. programs, and generally not from applicants to LL.M. programs who have already completed their first law degree.
Law School Admissions Testthe admissions test you must take to apply to law schoolthe test is offered four times per
Law School Admission Test, a test created by the Law School Admission Council, consisting of 101 multiple-choice questions. The LSAT is composed of five 35-minute sections, one of which is experimental, and a writing sample. It is required for students who are applying to law school.
a test of stamina as much as anything else
Law School Admissions Test, required of applicants to JD (professional law) programs and some graduate law programs in American law schools.
The LSAT is the Law School Admissions Test. All applicants to ABA-accredited law schools must take the LSAT. The LSAT tests reading comprehension, analytical reasoning, and logical reasoning skills.
Law School Admission Test required for admission to law school.
Law School Admission Test required of applicants to professional law programs and some postgraduate law programs in American law schools.
Law School Admission Test, a prerequisite for admission to most law schools.
Law School Admissions Test. Test taken as an admission requirement for a Law degree program.
Law School Admissions Test — an entrance examination for American law schools