How do schools look at accommodated testing?
Posted: Tue May 10, 2011 3:10 pm
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https://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=155219
I'm just going to lol and disregard you.bhangra23 wrote:Personally I think extra time is cheating. The LSAT is a challenge because of the time crunch, many on here could add serious pts to their scores with more time. They r going to look at it that way too, u should just take it like everyone else, a few pts lower won't hurt you as much as needing more time
True, I can see this logic.AreJay711 wrote:I mean it sucks but I bet that for LSATs with extra time allowed the correlation between LSAT and 1L GPA falls apart so they don't count it for as much. At the same time is there any reason you feel your undergrad gpa is less representative of your ability than the LSAT? I think that is a fair compromise.
How would this impact billing? If it takes someone an hour to do something that normally takes 5 minutes, would you still bill the whole hour? Just interested, not trying to pick a fight.krasivaya wrote:I'm just going to lol and disregard you.bhangra23 wrote:Personally I think extra time is cheating. The LSAT is a challenge because of the time crunch, many on here could add serious pts to their scores with more time. They r going to look at it that way too, u should just take it like everyone else, a few pts lower won't hurt you as much as needing more time
So a blind student should suck it up and forgo a braille packet? A student with limited mobility should just not finish their exams, not because they don't understand the material but because their hands don't move as fast as yours?
Many on here could add serious points to their scores with more time because they don't need more time.
Sometimes I think being an idiot in H.S. paid off lolkrasivaya wrote:True, I can see this logic.AreJay711 wrote:I mean it sucks but I bet that for LSATs with extra time allowed the correlation between LSAT and 1L GPA falls apart so they don't count it for as much. At the same time is there any reason you feel your undergrad gpa is less representative of your ability than the LSAT? I think that is a fair compromise.
It would be so excellent if LSAC didn't take my random for-credit classes in high school into account, I'd have a 4.0 :3
Almost didn't want to talk about this because you gave a fun rebuttal, but what I think he's trying to say is that after you've studied enough, literally the only thing preventing a lot of 167+ scorers from getting 180s is the amount of time they spend getting to the right answer. If you were blind or couldn't transfer answers to the paper as quickly because of some physical disability, then your rebuttal would be fun and spot on. But if it's ADD or something, and you just get more time to think about it because it takes you more time to think about things, people don't buy it for a variety of reasons, fair or unfair.krasivaya wrote:I'm just going to lol and disregard you.bhangra23 wrote:Personally I think extra time is cheating. The LSAT is a challenge because of the time crunch, many on here could add serious pts to their scores with more time. They r going to look at it that way too, u should just take it like everyone else, a few pts lower won't hurt you as much as needing more time
So a blind student should suck it up and forgo a braille packet? A student with limited mobility should just not finish their exams, not because they don't understand the material but because their hands don't move as fast as yours?
Many on here could add serious points to their scores with more time because they don't need more time.
If this is how they would do billing, this seems fairkrasivaya wrote:@AreJay711: I knoow. If I knew all that overachieving was going to bite me, I would've had a much better go of high school.
@LSATfromNC: That's a good question, I don't know how firms would approach that. My assumption is no, though. They would probably bill the amount of time it takes another lawyer and those with disabilities would just have to put in longer hours (something we're used to anyway). My 5 minutes to an hour was slight exaggeration though
I remember a article about a lawyer who was paralyzed from the neck down, even prior to law school. Throughout his career, and the LSAT, he had someone basically transcribing his words into writing. They didn't add anything to the paper that he did not say, or help analyze, they just put down verbatim what he told them to. I think the article had something to do with getting extra time on the LSAT, but this was years ago I read this, so my memory might be off regarding some of the details. I always wondered how he billed out his time, thankskrasivaya wrote:@AreJay711: I knoow. If I knew all that overachieving was going to bite me, I would've had a much better go of high school.
@LSATfromNC: That's a good question, I don't know how firms would approach that. My assumption is no, though. They would probably bill the amount of time it takes another lawyer and those with disabilities would just have to put in longer hours (something we're used to anyway). My 5 minutes to an hour was slight exaggeration though
If there are any schools that are going to not care as much about how you affect their medians, it would be HYS.krasivaya wrote:My GPA is right at median for HYS, but I just recently learned that accommodated tests don't count toward medians. I was hoping to do really well on the LSAT to make my application more attractive, but now it seems that even if I get a 180 it won't help much since the only thing schools can use from me is my GPA which is average by their standards.
I don't think anybody on TLS can answer this unless they've been in the situation. And since it is rare, and a bit stigmatized, you may not get an answer at all.krasivaya wrote:So, basically, does needing accommodations make me significantly less competitive? Or does it allow schools to approach my application more holistically, which could be a benefit?
interesting. you have no problem making a snap judgment about me, regardless of your line of work.krasivaya wrote:People like you are the reason I do the work that I do.glitter178 wrote:you're seriously upset that you have to disclose that you get extra time on the LSAT because of how it will look to HYS or other schools?
very little from here on out is going to be "fair" as in everyone who participates wins. law school is based on your performance on little more than a few timed exams; i can't imagine why it shouldn't be relevant to the schools that you require more time than the average test taker. Graduate school is largely dependent on papers with looser time limits; its entrance exam standard is irrelevant
My discomfort with LSAC's policy comes from my position as an advocate who's worked extensively with ADA legislation.
Since disability doesn't qualify as URM status and since having a disability can usually indicate a need for accommodations, there is often a lot of risk associated with disclosing. I advise most students not to disclose in job interviews and wait until after they are hired to request accommodations according to ADA. That way, these people can get accepted based on their merits not rejected based on their circumstances.
I feel like it should be the same for law school. Students with excellent GPA's and softs have proven their abilities, they should have the right to be accepted on merit and to disclose on their own terms. If these students have already put in countless extra hours doing work that able-bodied people could do in minutes to this point in their academic careers, there's no grounds for saying they won't do the same in law school and as a lawyer.
Academic and exam accommodations are some of the most important accommodations provided by ADA. Without them, many people with disabilities would be effectively excluded from higher education.glitter178 wrote:
interesting. you have no problem making a snap judgment about me, regardless of your line of work.
i'm not against real-world accommodations for those who need them. give me a break. we're not talking about eliminating the budget for wheel chair ramps and special education classes from public schools. we're talking about a test for professional school, which is designed, as so many other things in life, as a gatekeeper (a diminishing one, at that).
You're not even talking about accomodated testing that will allow you to get into any law school-- a la Thomas Jefferson. you're talking about HYS, which nearly EVERYONE is kept out of by virtue of some genetic or other shortcoming.