Hey everyone, I know it's frustrating and disorienting not to know how the Flex test will be scored. The LSAT is stressful enough without worrying about a new format.
But, the truth is, you've already been given the best converter in existence from the LSAC itself: the regular 4 section PrepTest. Take 4 section PTs. That will be the best predictor of how you will do on a 3 section Flex test. On test day, frame the loss of 1 LR section to yourself as a treat: 1 fewer stress inducing nerve-racking task to do.
We've debated creating a "Flex score converter" and a "Flex PT" and we've been hesitant to do so because we try to create only quality content, and a converter would be garbage.
The truth is that only LSAC can create a "Flex score converter" or a "Flex PT." LSAC has not given any significant details on how they will score LSAT Flex. Anything we try to do on that front will necessarily be guesswork and misleading.
Having said that, here is a "Flex Score Estimator" that we built based on requests by students to see what their score would be if LR, RC, and LG were weighted the same. This is garbage, but garbage can be fun, so feel free to play around with it and don’t take it seriously.
I asked JY a question about LSAT flex on the zoom webinar Tuesday, and he said that they can't create a conversion tool, even if they wanted to, because they don't know how exactly the conversion is going to work.
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7 comments
Hey everyone, I know it's frustrating and disorienting not to know how the Flex test will be scored. The LSAT is stressful enough without worrying about a new format.
But, the truth is, you've already been given the best converter in existence from the LSAC itself: the regular 4 section PrepTest. Take 4 section PTs. That will be the best predictor of how you will do on a 3 section Flex test. On test day, frame the loss of 1 LR section to yourself as a treat: 1 fewer stress inducing nerve-racking task to do.
We've debated creating a "Flex score converter" and a "Flex PT" and we've been hesitant to do so because we try to create only quality content, and a converter would be garbage.
The truth is that only LSAC can create a "Flex score converter" or a "Flex PT." LSAC has not given any significant details on how they will score LSAT Flex. Anything we try to do on that front will necessarily be guesswork and misleading.
Having said that, here is a "Flex Score Estimator" that we built based on requests by students to see what their score would be if LR, RC, and LG were weighted the same. This is garbage, but garbage can be fun, so feel free to play around with it and don’t take it seriously.
https://classic.7sage.com/lsat-flex-score-converter/
You’re welcome!!
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Blueprint came out with a score converter today for the Flex.
They made an announcement on Reddit: https://blog.blueprintprep.com/lsat/calculate-your-lsat-flex-score/
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I asked JY a question about LSAT flex on the zoom webinar Tuesday, and he said that they can't create a conversion tool, even if they wanted to, because they don't know how exactly the conversion is going to work.
bump, agreed