No absolutely not. Folks in the LSAT are very fast to throw down their pencils when time is called. Only do that if you would like to be kicked out of the LSAT and reported for a violation to LSAC, which every school you apply to will know about.
On paper, no. You will be punished. However, the proctor I had on test day was not very strict on a number of things. I still didn't cheat (one question vs getting thrown out), but I think one would have been able to get away with an extra 2/3 seconds easy in the room I was in. Five seconds is quite a bit of time when in a testing environment though, I don't think that would even get past the least strict LSAC proctor.
If you're on the last game or passage and you've been given the 5-minute warning, I would bubble in your answers with every single question answered instead of waiting until after all the questions are done in the set to bubble them in via a cluster.
Comments
No. You are suppose to put your pencil down.
Don’t do that
Do you really want to test your luck? Why not 34:55...
No absolutely not. Folks in the LSAT are very fast to throw down their pencils when time is called. Only do that if you would like to be kicked out of the LSAT and reported for a violation to LSAC, which every school you apply to will know about.
Nope. As @"Leah M B" says, you will likely to receive a misconduct slip (a.k.a. yellow slip).
On paper, no. You will be punished. However, the proctor I had on test day was not very strict on a number of things. I still didn't cheat (one question vs getting thrown out), but I think one would have been able to get away with an extra 2/3 seconds easy in the room I was in. Five seconds is quite a bit of time when in a testing environment though, I don't think that would even get past the least strict LSAC proctor.
If you're asking this particular question, I think you already know the answer.
If you're on the last game or passage and you've been given the 5-minute warning, I would bubble in your answers with every single question answered instead of waiting until after all the questions are done in the set to bubble them in via a cluster.