When stacked against the cost of a law education, the LSAT fee is pennies. Applicants facing financial hardship can apply for fee waivers through LSAC. Otherwise, the test fee is just the start of the significant financial burden of law school (even with scholarships). Conversely, adding points to your score by retesting could significantly increase scholarship money offers and/or tier of school which leads to better career outcomes (aka better paying jobs).
LOL! YOU'RE TELLING ME!! But I'm going to take a deep breath and try to figure something out. I hope you were able to figure something out considering that it's been two years since your comment. 💜
This lady is not rooted in reality. Are we supposed to put our life on hold for an exam that doesn't really mean anything other than predicting your 1L grades? Not everyone lives a flowery life where they have all this time to get a higher score.
I can’t stand this. Oh ya, just skip out on a test that’s $200+ or “just take it again”. This is so privileged
EXTREMELY... you don't get that money back.
When stacked against the cost of a law education, the LSAT fee is pennies. Applicants facing financial hardship can apply for fee waivers through LSAC. Otherwise, the test fee is just the start of the significant financial burden of law school (even with scholarships). Conversely, adding points to your score by retesting could significantly increase scholarship money offers and/or tier of school which leads to better career outcomes (aka better paying jobs).
Extremely discouraged after this video, lol.
LOL! YOU'RE TELLING ME!! But I'm going to take a deep breath and try to figure something out. I hope you were able to figure something out considering that it's been two years since your comment. 💜
Steve thank you for this interview.
This lady is not rooted in reality. Are we supposed to put our life on hold for an exam that doesn't really mean anything other than predicting your 1L grades? Not everyone lives a flowery life where they have all this time to get a higher score.
What about taking the FLEX twice, and experiencing difficulties both times (with no more time for another LSAT within the Fall deadline)?
I bet she didn’t even go to law school.