A fourth day has been added to the June administration of the primary Law School Admission Test (LSAT), according to the Law School Admission Council (LSAC).
Testing will now take place June 5, 6, 7 and 8, according to the schedule on the LSAC website.
In April, more than 33,000 students had registered for the June LSAT, according to the LSAC. Previously, the largest LSAT administration since the beginning of the pandemic was in November 2020, with more than 27,000 test-takers.
This year’s June administration will be the last time that the “logic games” section will appear on the test. Starting in August, test-takers will find a second scored logical reasoning section.
That change comes after a 2019 settlement with two blind plaintiffs who said they were unable to draw diagrams to help answer the questions in the LSAT’s analytical reasoning section, commonly known as “logic games,” which involves deductive reasoning.
As previously reported in the 2024 Spring issue of preLaw Magazine, this year presents a unique opportunity for students taking the June LSAT with logic games to have the opportunity to retake the LSAT in August without that section.
Read the full story in preLaw Magazine: Logic games are out; logical reasoning is in