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I just received my December score and it's 3 points lower than my highest score (I took June, September, and December). I'm super disappointed because I thought I did much better than September(my highest). How do law schools take this?
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6 comments
@ayoumans673 said:
I did 1pt lower and I thought that test was easier than a lot of the practice tests I was taking. Whatever. I studied and practiced all this year. Time to move on
I'm on the same wavelength as you. I remember leaving the testing room with a smile on my face. I was so confident and believed I did so much better than the September LSAT. I only scored 2 points better this time around. I took it REALLY hard, but I did the best I could've ever done so like you said "time to move on." (sigh)
@ayoumans673 said:
I did 1pt lower and I thought that test was easier than a lot of the practice tests I was taking. Whatever. I studied and practiced all this year. Time to move on
I'm on the same boat as you are. scored 1 point lower in Dec. My June and Sept were a tie. But as @10024.youmans said: IT'S TIME TO MOVE ON.
I did 1pt lower and I thought that test was easier than a lot of the practice tests I was taking. Whatever. I studied and practiced all this year. Time to move on
i haven't even received my score yet :neutral:
Nearly all law schools will only look at your highest score. I believe Yale considers all of them - possibly as an average? I don’t recall exactly. But other than them, it’s nearly unanimous that a school will only consider your highest score.
Do you have any idea why you might have underperformed? Maybe you hit a certain score and then lost motivation to improve beyond that point? I'd say you don't have much to worry about, though, honestly.