... question concerning the LSAT scoring vs. LSATflex scoring. I took ... the June LSAT, so ... I was studying with the flex, now ... which is not the flex. The scoring is kind ... previous tests, that were flex, when I missed that ...
... got right and wrong, but LSAT says these files are " ... my knowledge the Nov 2021 LSAT is disclosed, and when ... decided to discontinue disclosing recent LSAT scores for the time being ... the pandemic began and the LSATFlex got popularized. Hopefully they'll ...
Does anybody know when the inflated LSAT scores will drop for school median averages? I've been told they're from the LSATFlex which ended back in August of 2021. I've seen some median LSAT averages go up 3-4 points for some of the top 25 schools.
... were based on the first LSATFlex in May 2020. How do ... compare with the current online LSAT? Are they around the same ... am taking the upcoming June LSAT. Thank you.
... actually a Wiki dedicated to LSAT environments! People post the place ... they took the LSAT at and rate their experience ... scroll down a bit (Or CTRL+F). :)
... is such bullsh*t. The LSATflex is terrible. If people can ... surely take a socially distanced LSAT. This FLEX version of the test ... I have to retake the LSAT. This is terrible news and ... . Hate to be negative but f the lsatflex.
... is such bullsh*t. The LSATflex is terrible. If people can ... surely take a socially distanced LSAT. This FLEX version of the test ... I have to retake the LSAT. This is terrible news and ... . Hate to be negative but f the lsatflex.
It really doesn't help that much. The questions don't use the exact same wording as the text so you can only seldom ctrl+f anything important. Also, on the Flex they highlight an excerpt for you if the question is asking about it.
I emailed LSAC about a month ago about it, this was their response:
Thank you for writing. This is to confirm the CTRL + F (Find) functions is permitted while taking the LSAT.
Using ctrl + F for questions that ask about ... passage ctrl + F is extremely useful. I’ve never taken an actual LSAT ... it seems the use of ctrl + F is increasingly becoming common knowledge ...