@akikookmt881 concerning necessary documentation, I was confused about how to prove I have the condition I need accommodations for. I called LSAC and the women on the phone barley had an answer for me. My doctor just provided a consultation note that states my condition under "assessment." Is this appropriate? (My doctor provided her personal statement as well) I didn't know if I needed to provide blood work or not, and when I asked the lady on the phone she said that seemed unnecessary.
LSAC asks for proof of diagnosis so you need something that states you have your condition. I provided my test results.
@akikookmt881 concerning necessary documentation, I was confused about how to prove I have the condition I need accommodations for. I called LSAC and the women on the phone barley had an answer for me. My doctor just provided a consultation note that states my condition under "assessment." Is this appropriate? (My doctor provided her personal statement as well) I didn't know if I needed to provide blood work or not, and when I asked the lady on the phone she said that seemed unnecessary.
Hey everyone. I've been doing some research and I heard that if someone has a previous lsat score that is decent and applies for accommodations, the may not receive it. I scored a 145 and 147 on my previous LSATs. I actually wrote how I performed poorly on these exams because of my condition. Will these two previous scores hold me back from being granted accommodations?
Nope. You will be fine as long as you have all the necessary documentation.
Good luck!
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6 comments
@micahbowden77184 thank you!
@akikookmt881 said:
@micahbowden77184 okay thank you. I hope what I sent in was enough
Something that says X has been diagnosed with X should be sufficient. You should be fine.
@micahbowden77184 okay thank you. I hope what I sent in was enough
@akikookmt881 said:
@akikookmt881 concerning necessary documentation, I was confused about how to prove I have the condition I need accommodations for. I called LSAC and the women on the phone barley had an answer for me. My doctor just provided a consultation note that states my condition under "assessment." Is this appropriate? (My doctor provided her personal statement as well) I didn't know if I needed to provide blood work or not, and when I asked the lady on the phone she said that seemed unnecessary.
LSAC asks for proof of diagnosis so you need something that states you have your condition. I provided my test results.
@akikookmt881 concerning necessary documentation, I was confused about how to prove I have the condition I need accommodations for. I called LSAC and the women on the phone barley had an answer for me. My doctor just provided a consultation note that states my condition under "assessment." Is this appropriate? (My doctor provided her personal statement as well) I didn't know if I needed to provide blood work or not, and when I asked the lady on the phone she said that seemed unnecessary.
@akikookmt881 said:
Hey everyone. I've been doing some research and I heard that if someone has a previous lsat score that is decent and applies for accommodations, the may not receive it. I scored a 145 and 147 on my previous LSATs. I actually wrote how I performed poorly on these exams because of my condition. Will these two previous scores hold me back from being granted accommodations?
Nope. You will be fine as long as you have all the necessary documentation.
Good luck!