Contributing

What is a 75% on the LSAT?

What is a 75% on the LSAT?

Your percentile rank tells you the percentage of scaled scores in the last three years that your score beats. For example if your LSAT Scaled Score is 157 you will have a percentile rank of approximately 75% meaning that your Scaled Score of 157 is better than 75% of the LSAT Scaled Scores for the last three years.

What is a 72 on the LSAT?

** Based on the average of three LSAT administrations. The percentiles for 120, 179, and 180 were adjusted based on analysis of the data….Estimated Score Conversions.

Raw score* Scaled Score Est. Percentile**
77-78 162 85.71%
76 161 83.07%
74-75 160 80.37%
72-73 159 77.47%

Is a 174 on the LSAT good?

According to the Law School Admission Council, only around 0.1% of all test takers earn a perfect LSAT score. Scoring a 174 on the LSAT will place you at or above the 75th percentile of admitted students at all law schools except for Harvard and Yale (though still above their reported medians).

What’s the conversion score on the LSAT test?

LSAT Raw Score Conversion The LSAT is scored from a 120 (lowest) to a 180 (highest). Since the number of questions on your test doesn’t translate evenly into those 61 possible scores, the test makers use what’s called a Conversion Chart.

What should my LSAT score be if I scored 0?

So if you scored 0 on the Raw LSAT Score (0 questions right) you would likely have an LSAT Scaled Score of 120 and if your Raw LSAT Score was 101 you would likely have an LSAT Scaled Score of 180. The conversion process is done by using a statistical procedure called equating.

Which is harder the LSAT or the June 2007 LSAT?

For example, the October 1997 LSAT was harder than the June 2007 LSAT and so if you wrote both tests and your Raw LSAT Score on both was 55 your LSAT Scaled Score for the June 2007 LSAT would be 149 and for the October 1997 LSAT it would be 150. Generally the same Raw LSAT Score will produce the same or very similar LSAT Scaled Scores.

What are the percentiles on the LSAT test?

The actual conversion varies between test administrations. ** Based on the average of three LSAT administrations. The percentiles for 120, 179, and 180 were adjusted based on analysis of the data. The term “LSAT score” is ambiguous.