Quote:
Originally Posted by troutman
Practice, practice, practice. I didn't take a course, but get some books and old exams and get used to the types of questions you will be asked. My score got better by practice.
Then, ask yourself - why would you want to be a lawyer?
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QFD.
I took the LSAT in 2002. Imagine the most fun you could possibly have in your life time. Now imagine the exact opposite. The test writing experience sucks a lot. You're crammed up in a lecture theatre with a hundred or so other wannabe-law-students sweating and stinking up the joint. On top of that, the test itself doesn't seem to have any real life connection to the practice of law. They might as well use some other arbitrary measuring stick like foot size to determine law school entry.
On the other hand, if the idea is to see how somoene deals with pressure doing a completely mundane and useless task, then the LSAT may be a halfway decent diagnostic test after all. Guess you could also describe the practice of law in similar terms too...