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With the LSAT, the percentile for a 180 is 99.97%. ... With roughly 100,000 LSATs administered in the past year, that would suggest that about 30 people received a perfect score. When only 30 people achieve this score out of 100,000 test takers, the inference is that this is a very, very difficult exam!
It is actually quite remarkable that LSAC is able to keep these scores relatively consistent while administering the test 4 times each year. So, the LSAT tends to be of comparable difficulty, according to results, from administration to administration.
The bar may be "harder" the sense that it requires more preparation, but the vast majority of law students who take it seriously pass. If you consider "passing" the LSAT to be a score that will get you into an ABA school (call it 150), then the LSAT has a 50% fail rate.
The conclusion in all of this is that yes indeed, the LSAT is a very hard test. From any objective measure, it's a challenge to score well on this exam. ... The LSAT will always be difficult, but you can improve, and each point you move up takes you above more and more of your fellow test takers.
Once your brain gets in that rhythm, it will run very efficiently, and you'll find that your scores will increase. There's no secret to getting a 160 on the LSAT. It just takes hard work. But, more than that, it takes smart work.
The Easiest and Most Difficult Sections to Improve On Logic Games, also known as Analytical Reasoning, is the section most foreign to the typical LSAT student. It has nothing to do with the law, and is based on a puzzle format. Because the section is so unusual, most students do not know how to attack it.
The Easiest and Most Difficult Sections to Improve On Logic Games, also known as Analytical Reasoning, is the section most foreign to the typical LSAT student.
It is actually quite remarkable that LSAC is able to keep these scores relatively consistent while administering the test 4 times each year. So, the LSAT tends to be of comparable difficulty, according to results, from administration to administration.
When guessing on the LSAT the best strategy is generally to always guess D. Of course, if you are able to eliminate D as an answer choice, don't choose D. However, if you do not have time and you simply need to make a guess, you shouldn't guess randomly. Statistically, the most common credited response is answer D.
The LSAT is comprised of five sections of multiple-choice questions: Logical Reasoning (two sections), Analytical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, and an unscored Variable Section. A Writing Sample is administered at the end of the test.
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