Why does LSAC compute LSAT and GPA averages from your school?
I can think of many possible answers but I was wondering if anyone knew the actual reason... because especially LSAT seems rather irrelevant, in judging your as a candidate.
I get that "better schools" would have "better LSAT" but "grade inflating schools" do not necessarily correlate to better or worse... so why would they care it doesn't solve any actual computational problem.
LSAC form Forum
- Dany
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Re: LSAC form
It's not to compare you to applicants from other schools, necessarily, but to show where you fell at your school. A 3.5 where the average GPA is a 3.6 is pretty bad. If the average GPA is a 3.0, however, that 3.5 looks better.admisionquestion wrote:I get that "better schools" would have "better LSAT" but "grade inflating schools" do not necessarily correlate to better or worse... so why would they care it doesn't solve any actual computational problem.
But keep in mind that none of this really matters too much, because law schools will care about the numbers they send to US News. They don't get to include a note saying "But, like, his school was really hard."
Oh, and the LSAT does have some degree correlation with first-year grades. It's not totally irrelevant in judging candidacy for law school.
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Re: LSAC form
Right. But Why do they computer your schools average LSAT.