... I did crop my original photo from June to fit the ... hands were in the original photo, whoo-dee-do), I highly ... and isn't the same photo as your test center ID ... . can't upload the same photo you walk in with). These ...
... initially when I uploaded the photo the 2x2 requirement was definitely ... late to change your photo. Acceptability of your photo will be determined ... supervisor will confirm that the photo displayed on your admission ticket ...
... able to change your uploaded photo at this time, however please ... be advised that your current photo appears to meet all requirements ... , who will confirm that your photo meets all requirements, and matches ...
@DallasOnFire HAHA! I was wearing a jersey, and trying to show off the number! It was the only photo on my computer that wasn't a selfie. LOL But thanks. I mean its a clear shoulder and up picture.
That's correct! For some strange reason I'm not wearing glasses in my photo but I always have my glasses on IRL and on test day, the proctor had no issue identifying me :)
This is a pretty tough game. Question 9 took me a bit and was initially quite confusing. My confusion emanated from the same point as yours. That's what I will try to address here.
So the question is an EXCEPT question. Meaning we are ...
The photo on your ticket should suffice if it doesn't break any LSAC rules. Other than that, a standard valid ID with your photo needs to be with you too whether it's a driver's license, passport etc.
What @montaha.rizeq said. If I recall correctly, your uploaded photo will be printed out on your ticket. Aside from that, all you need is a valid photo ID.
All we need to bring is a photo ID and the first page of our ticket (in other words, we don't need to bring the checklist or the legal terms and conditions pages), correct?
It's okay, that's just how it printed (same for me). You're fine =) Just make sure it isn't blurred out or anything.
If it is really bothering you, worse yet, bring a photo as a replacement.
This is an interesting question and something that the LSAT does quite often on contemporary tests. It requires a close reading and understanding of the stimulus and really nothing more in my estimation. No fancy conditional chains or negation tests here ...