LSAT
The Law School Admissions Test (LSAT) is administered four times a year at designated centres throughout the world; and it is required for admission to all the 202 law schools that make up the Law School Admission Council both in the US and Canada. It is very rarely retaken because all of a student's LSAT scores are reported to their law school, not just their highest or most recent score, which makes this test quite a daunting one.
Our LSAT Prep Course is comprehensive in that it provides thorough preparation in the most dynamic, effective methods and the use of updated test-taking strategies for all areas of the test. Through this method, students will build their skills from each session while increasing their confidence level over the span of the course. We are not going to lie - our LSAT course requires students to work hard and exhibit effort and diligence in their studies. Take our advice and your will:
- Learn score-raising, time-saving strategies from our expert instructors
- Be able to build endurance to take full-length practice tests to review/analyze your projected scores
CAUTION: There is no easy route through this course. There are no FAQ's for the LSAT. But what we provide are of substantial benefit — diagnostic and practice exams, suggestions for each question type and overall exam strategies. However, your performance on the LSAT, as with everything else in law school and law practice is largely up to you. You will have to wrestle with the questions and develop your analytical skills through an investment of serious time and effort to do well on the LSAT. This is true regardless of whether you prepare for it on your own or by doing our course.
What is the LSAT about?
LSAT consists of five 35-minute multiple choice sections (one of which is an unscored experimental section), followed by an unscored writing sample section.
- Logical Reasoning (LR), commonly known as "arguments", designed to test your ability to dissect and analyze arguments.
- Reading Comprehension (RC), consists of four passages of 400–500 words, and between 5 to 8 questions relating to each passage.
- Analytical Reasoning, referred to as the "logic games" (LG) and is the most difficult section of the test which requires the most pre-test preparation.
- Writing sample, the final section where it's presented to prompt a decision from you to write an essay whether "for" or "against" the topic.
Note: The Test Council does not automatically inform law schools of a candidate's registration for a retest. It is your responsibility to inform law schools directly about your registration for additional tests.
Because this is a uniquely individualistic test, we cannot offer group courses.
LNAT Private Course
Contact hours: 24 hours (covers Academic Writing, Critical Reading, Analytical Reasoning & Verbal Reasoning)
LNAT Crash Course (one-to-one sessions only)
Contact hours: 24 hours (covers Academic Writing, Critical Reading, Analytical Reasoning & Verbal Reasoning) Completed no less than 21 days
NO HIDDEN ADDITIONAL FEES...
This course includes the Official Guidebook and relevant diagnostic / practice tests.
Online course available.
Our LSAT Prep Course is comprehensive in that it provides thorough preparation in the most dynamic, effective methods and the use of updated test-taking strategies for all areas of the test. Through this method, students will build their skills from each session while increasing their confidence level over the span of the course. We are not going to lie - our LSAT course requires students to work hard and exhibit effort and diligence in their studies. Take our advice and your will:
- Learn score-raising, time-saving strategies from our expert instructors
- Be able to build endurance to take full-length practice tests to review/analyze your projected scores
CAUTION: There is no easy route through this course. There are no FAQ's for the LSAT. But what we provide are of substantial benefit — diagnostic and practice exams, suggestions for each question type and overall exam strategies. However, your performance on the LSAT, as with everything else in law school and law practice is largely up to you. You will have to wrestle with the questions and develop your analytical skills through an investment of serious time and effort to do well on the LSAT. This is true regardless of whether you prepare for it on your own or by doing our course.
What is the LSAT about?
LSAT consists of five 35-minute multiple choice sections (one of which is an unscored experimental section), followed by an unscored writing sample section.
- Logical Reasoning (LR), commonly known as "arguments", designed to test your ability to dissect and analyze arguments.
- Reading Comprehension (RC), consists of four passages of 400–500 words, and between 5 to 8 questions relating to each passage.
- Analytical Reasoning, referred to as the "logic games" (LG) and is the most difficult section of the test which requires the most pre-test preparation.
- Writing sample, the final section where it's presented to prompt a decision from you to write an essay whether "for" or "against" the topic.
Note: The Test Council does not automatically inform law schools of a candidate's registration for a retest. It is your responsibility to inform law schools directly about your registration for additional tests.
Because this is a uniquely individualistic test, we cannot offer group courses.
LNAT Private Course
Contact hours: 24 hours (covers Academic Writing, Critical Reading, Analytical Reasoning & Verbal Reasoning)
LNAT Crash Course (one-to-one sessions only)
Contact hours: 24 hours (covers Academic Writing, Critical Reading, Analytical Reasoning & Verbal Reasoning) Completed no less than 21 days
NO HIDDEN ADDITIONAL FEES...
This course includes the Official Guidebook and relevant diagnostic / practice tests.
Online course available.
Powered by
Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
