Bazsites.com Lsat
Directory Topics
On the Web
- PowerScore LSAT Preparation - 80 hour and 16 hour LSAT preparation courses offered nationwide.
- TestMasters - Offering LSAT classes throughout the United States.
- Official Site of the Law Student Admission Council - The website of the body that administers the LSAT. Although an American site, all Canadian Law Students take the LSAT.
- TestWell - Details of events for those preparing for the LSAT. Lesson schedules, testimonials, information about the tutors, practice sessions.
- Cutts Personal Tutorial - Phone tutorial for live study at home and admissions information.
- http://www.agos.co.jp/ - TOEFL GMAT GRE SAT LSAT
- Charlie Roadman - Austin lawyer practicing criminal defense, entertainment law, and providing private LSAT tutoring.
- Pre-Law Society of Brooklyn College - LSAT information as well as other pre-law information an aspiring lawyer may need. Also a chat forum and career center.
- Princeton Review -- Law School Section - Perhaps the most valuable resource on the Internet for those going to law school. Site contains information about applying to law school, financing your legal education, LSAT preparation, and a law school discussion board.
- Law School Discussion.org - Topics include getting accepted to law school, preparing for life as a 1L, law school rankings, and LSAT discussions.
Wikipedia Articles
- ItemWise - ItemWise is an online application designed to help prospective test-takers prepare for the LSAT (the North American law school admissions test) hosted on the LSAC website. The LSAC describes the application as a "LSAT familiarization tool," and notes that, due to the fact of being an online application, ItemWise thus differs from the paper-test nature of the actual LSAT which test-takers take, but is designed to be part of test-takers' preparation process for the exam.
- Law School Admission Test - The Law School Admission Test (LSAT) is an examination administered by the Law School Admission Council (LSAC), intended to provide law schools in the United States and Canada with (to quote LSAC) "a standard measure of acquired reading and verbal reasoning skills that law schools can use as one of several factors in assessing ...