LSAT Online Course
This convenient and flexible self-study option allows you to prep for the LSAT on your own. Our score-raising lessons will teach you how to maximize your study time by focusing on the highest-yield areas of the test.
- Pick the place, time and pace that works best for your LSAT study
- Receive extensive real LSAT practice and exclusive proven score-raising strategies:
- 6 full-length LSAT exams
- 800+ real LSAT questions, plus explanations
- Access more than 30 online workshops
- Get additional online help from our LSAT Academic Advisors
LSAT Online Course: £295
- 3-month course: 24/7 access
- 6 full-length LSAT practice tests
- Online workshops
- 800+ real LSAT questions
- High quality home study materials
Shipping of Course Materials
Addresses in the UK - Free
Addresses in Europe - £40
Addresses in the USA/Canada - £80
Other countries - please contact us for a quote
- Big Orange Book of Real LSATs—content from 8 real LSATs, including 2 tests in full-length format (more than 800 questions and 4,000 explanations of why the right answer was correct and why the distracters were not)
- 33 online Logical Reasoning, Reading Comprehension, Logic Games, Stress Management, and Law School Admissions workshops
- Online access to LSAT Academic Advisors
- Home study kit with 4 full-length practice tests
The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is required for entry into most US law schools – and all schools approved by the American Bar Association (ABA).
The LSAT is a skills-based test. You will not be required to regurgitate memorized facts or apply learned formulas to specific problems. The LSAT does require you to think quickly, thoroughly and strategically.
The LSAT is tests analytical thinking and critical reading skills considered by admissions officers as essential for success in the first year of US law school.
Logical Reasoning Section I
Time: 35 minutes
Format: 24-26 questions
Topics Tested: Analyzing Arguments and Evaluating Arguments
Logical Reasoning Section II
Time: 35 minutes
Format: 24-26 questions
Topics Tested: Analyzing Arguments and Evaluating Arguments
Logic Games Section
Time: 35 minutes
Format: 22-24 questions
Topics Tested: Basic Logic, Systems of Order, and Outcomes
Reading Comprehension Section
Time: 35 minutes
Format: 26-28 questions
Topics Tested: Identifying Purpose, Identifying Structure, and Ascertaining Main Idea
Experimental Section
Time: 35 minutes
Format: 22-28 unscored, experimental questions
Topics Tested: Any material tested in other LSAT sections
Question Types: Could be any from other LSAT sections
Writing Sample
Time: 35 minutes
Format: Two-page written response to a prompt
Topics Tested: Writing Ability, Ability to Argue a Position, and Ability to Analyze an Argument
Once you have completed your LSAT exam you will receive one overall score, ranging from 120 to 180.
There are no separate scores for the individual multiple choice sections. In addition, you will be given a "score band"—a range of scaled scores which are above and below your score, indicating a "true score" at a reasonable level of confidence.
Finally, you will also be awarded a percentile score that ranks your performance relative to the scores of a large sample population of other LSAT takers.
You register for the exam with the test administrators, the Law School Admission Council, online at www.lsac.org. There is a $120 registration fee to take the LSAT. Any late registrants will be charged an additional US$60.
Almost all ABA-approved US law schools will also require you to register with the Law School Data Assembly Service (LSDAS). The LSDAS, or Law Services, will provide a report for each law school to which you apply. This report contains information that law schools use, along with your application, letters of recommendation and your personal essay to make a decision on your application.
The LSDAS charges a $109 fee for their service, which will last for a period of 5 years from your registration date.