4 comments

  • Monday, Jul 13 2020

    There are also, I believe, multiple tests for the flex period that may or may not have the same level of difficulty, which means that how many you can get wrong depends on which test you get. For this time period there are multiple tests, with perhaps multiple scales. The sample sizes to determine difficulty are almost certainly a lot smaller than normal, as usually tens of thousands of students take any given LSAT, but I imagine that LSAT has enough reason to think that how well thousands of students do on a given test will roughly approximate how well tens of thousands will do on that same test.

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  • Monday, Jul 13 2020

    https://classic.7sage.com/lsat-flex-score-converter/

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  • Monday, Jul 13 2020

    my assumption is 25% less than typical amount since it will be missing 25% of the traditional test

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  • Monday, Jul 13 2020

    was thinking the same, taking the flex in august

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