The LSAT comprises scored questions. You earn one raw point for every question that you get right, and unlike what you remember from the SAT , you neither gain nor lose any points for questions that you miss.
Part of your strategy may be to leave some questions unanswered in an effort to get all the other questions right. This is an appropriate strategy for almost everyone taking the LSAT. What is included in my score report? Your percentile rank , which reflects the percentage of test takers whose scores were lower than yours during the previous three testing years. A percentile rank is reported for each of your scores. Your score band. Who receives my score report? LSAT scores are often the determining factor between getting accepted or waitlisted to a law school, receiving a scholarship or applying for a loan for said school, and even your starting salary after law school!
The LSAT scores range from , with being the lowest possible score. The raw score is the number of correct responses across the four scored sections, added together. LSAT decides which raw score is going to correspond to which scaled score on a scale of based on a variety of factors, like the total number of questions on the test and the overall difficulty of the questions.
The scaled score is usually the score you will talk about when asked how you did on the LSAT. Other LSATs have slightly different score conversations. So on other exams, you may have to answer more questions, or fewer questions, correctly to earn a given scaled score.
Your LSAT percentile score is the percent of test takers who scored lower than you on that particular exam. By now you've probably guessed that there's a lot that goes into your LSAT scores.
So while people often talk about how many questions one could have missed to get a , A test with a -9 curve is going to be less forgiving than a test with a curve across the board, which means that you'd have to get more questions right than you otherwise would to get any particular score. Each score represents a percentile which shows how you did in comparison to everyone else who took the same test, and place you in the same percentile as those who scored the same as you in the past.
With that being said, the test writers understand that some of their tests are a little harder than others. To this end, the harder the test, the bigger the curve.
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