First-time registrants for the LSAT pay a fee to use the Credential Assembly Service (CAS) mandated for all ABA-approved colleges of law regarding jurist doctor applicants. CAS summarizes applicants’ undergraduate work and bundles it with all submitted documents to generate a commensurate report sent to each applied law school accordingly. Once a college has received a completed application, the institution requests a CAS law school report from the LSAC. And since this process correlates with admissions of first-year law …show more content…
A half-day examination, offered four times per year, the LSAT administers from designated testing centers by the LSAC for prospective law school candidates as depicted in Figure 6.4. By and large, the LSAC offers those examination dates preceded by a registration deadline of approximately one month with actual test dates specified on their website. And since the ABA has decreed mandatory requirements, there currently exist no alternative means to enter an accredited college of law as those of undergraduate colleges and universities. Given these points, acceptance to an accredited law school, an applicant must attain a high score on the LSAT and maintain strong academic performance for all submitted college