Does law school look at average lsat scores if I took more than one test? I knew that ABA changed the rules to only evaluating highest scores, and my tutor didn't say anything about average scores, so even though I didn't do well in this Feb test, I still didn't cancel my grades since it's my first time. But now I heard my friends all cancelled their grades and said they'll look at average. OMG! and I googled it but people's views differ. Can anyone give me a definite answer? I'm super worried.... Thanks!!

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7 comments

  • Saturday, Mar 12 2016

    LSAT scores are a big factor in determining a school’s ranking, and the highest score is the only one that matters for that. So they do have strong motivation to overlook weaker scores when deciding when to make someone an offer or not.

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  • Saturday, Mar 12 2016

    What schools say they do or care about is not the same as what they actually do or care about. Hell look at Law School Transparency to see how different the reality of employment prospects is from what schools say it is.

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  • Saturday, Mar 12 2016

    I have many personal anecdotes that support the stance that they only look at highest score. My friend's 155(first lsat) and 168(second lsat) and multiple t14 acceptances with $ are clear support for that.

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  • Saturday, Mar 12 2016

    Thanks guys! But if you look at the information given by law schools (you can refer to this website http://www.velocitylsat.com/resources/law-school-multiple-lsat-score-policies ), it looks like almost all schools indicate that they won't just look at highest scores.)

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  • Friday, Mar 11 2016

    The highest score is what matters.

    NYU is one of the only school that implies they average. But they, like Columbia, Yale, Harvard, all say they will evaluate all of your scores as a part of your application. Keep in mind it is in the best interest of the schools to take the highest score you have and not to average.

    Also about the cancellations, if you have multiple cancellations for the very top schools that can also be a detriment.

    But please don't stress many people have multiple takes and varying scores. If there was a huge difference and something that impacted your performance for the LSAT you could write an addenda to explain the variance, but that's going into a different topic.

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  • Friday, Mar 11 2016

    yup! I'd be in a lot of trouble if they didn't. They only care about your highest score unless you're talking about Yale of course.

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  • Friday, Mar 11 2016

    They only care about your highest score

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