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~80% of the test takers at my test center had their cell phone. Outside the testing room, a lot of people were playing on their phones. After we entered the room, the proctors told us to "turn our phones off during the test".. The desks even had "Turn phone off" stickers on them. Yet we all signed admission tickets certifying that we didn't bring our phone to the test.
Pretty frustrating to see -- per the rules, I did not bring my phone, but it would have been nice to have it during the break
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I had the guy in line in front of me argue with the proctor for about 5-10 minutes about bringing his cell phone in, because he had no where else to put it. He also had a giant backpack. For someone who wants to be a lawyer, he showed a very poor attention to detail. I noticed he left the exam in section 2, and I was not the slightest bit surprised.
There was also a guy wearing an Apple Watch. Seems like my proctors were ignorant of the LSAC rules, willfully chose to ignore some of the rules, or both.
And I thought my testing center was lax! They let us leave the testing room to use the restroom after we were checked in and didn't really make a big deal about cell phones, although one girl did come in with hers in her hand asking what to do with it. The proctor just told her to hide it somewhere outside the classroom. Also: how the hell did so many people not know you can't use mechanical pencils! I was like, I've tried 18 different pencils before deciding on this particular one...
All I could think at with the title was "Phones at MY test center? It's more common than you'd think!"
But really, tell LSAC. That's a pretty big violation.
@tanes25413 Maybe there is concern about exchanging information with other test takers in other locations about previous sections that they have yet to take? E.g. I take LG and then in break text friend who had LR and we exchange info. Other than those who want to lookup up definitions of words or something and go back to previous sections, not sure.
Wow! Now this is something that would piss me off. We've seen people doing this since testing in elementary but I can't believe she was so bold to try it on the freaking LSAT! She's got some big ones obviously! I saw a girl go back to an ended section to finish up the previous section when I tested a few years back. SMH. I would report these type issues before I would report the phones. If they aren't allowed in the room and you're caught with one then sure you should be disqualified. I just don't see how having phones on the breaks affects testing. How can you cheat by having your phone on your break? I understand that it is a violation and a totally valid reason for anyone to report. Rules are rules.
Seems like an unfair advantage. I'd report it!
Also: 5 seconds after time was called, there was a girl near me still writing her test. Our proctor just told her "Once again, please stop" but did not disqualify her. Sad to see.
One tester at my location had her cellphone in her ziploc and the proctor refused to check her in until the phone was outside the building. Good job, proc!
Yeah, 80% having phones is outrageous!
I would also think about reporting it as it is an avenue for cheating
That's a pretty outrageous violation. You did right, and I'd seriously think about reporting that to LSAC.
@dcramer28596 They could make an example of someone and disqualify him/her. That would het the others in line fast. Or at least give a warning that anybody with a phone out in 60 seconds will be DQ'd.
Same thing happened to me, but I assume it's because they probably can't really do anything to stop it. I mean they're not about to start patting people down. It was annoying since I didn't have my phone and couldn't call anyone to pick me up but I don't really care what anyone else does tbh.
thats ridiculous and a direct violation of the rules