http://dissentingjustice.blogspot.com/2008/10/illinois-joins-michigan-law-lsat-not.html
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
Illinois Joins Michigan Law: LSAT Not Required for Certain Applicants

Multiple studies have demonstrated that the LSAT has an economic, gender, and racial bias.
It does not adequately predict how well women, low-income, and minority
students perform in law school. This likely results from both the type
of questions on the test and the cost-prohibitive nature of test
preparation courses that disparately impact the poor and persons of
color. Generally, the test works best in predicting first-year grades,
but not much after that. It certainly does not correlate with
professional achievement after law school. Consequently, many education
activists view the LSAT (along with the SAT and other standardized
tests) as an invalid component of law school admissions. Apparently,
these activists have convinced some law schools to rethink the
usefulness of the test.
Professor Brian
Leiter (University of Chicago Law School) has a great blog that
contains all of the latest "buzz" among law schools. Though it can have
a gossipy feel at times, it nevertheless provides a wealth of
information related to legal academia. Today, the Leiter blog
reports that both Michigan and Illinois have abolished the LSAT
requirement for certain classes of applicants. Under the Illinois
program, in-state residents with a 3.0 GPA can bypass the LSAT.
Michigan's policy allows in-state applicants with a 3.8 GPA to opt-out
of the test.
To read the complete article:
http://dissentingjustice.blogspot.com/2008/10/illinois-joins-michigan-law-lsat-not.html
Richardson - LSAT - GMAT - GRE - MCAT Preparation Courses - Toronto, Canada
http://www.prep.com
To read the complete article:
http://dissentingjustice.blogspot.com/2008/10/illinois-joins-michigan-law-lsat-not.html
Richardson - LSAT - GMAT - GRE - MCAT Preparation Courses - Toronto, Canada
http://www.prep.com