- Mon Apr 11, 2016 11:20 pm
#22964
Hello,
I had a question as I will be seeking accommodations on the LSAT. (Hopefully I can get an answer from someone who is familiar with LSAC's new updated policies on accommodated testing).
Have there been any recent changes/or do you foresee any test design changes in the future( even slight ones) because of the lawsuit settlement and LSAC making it slightly easier to gain accommodations?
The new policy can make things a bit complicated because standardized tests measure different things: for example the GRE there is a high emphasis on vocabulary and math and if you don't know the words or know how to solve the problems granting a test taker extra time isn't going to help but on the LSAT granting extra time makes the problems easier to solve as time is a major issue for people with or without disabilities. (So I can understandably see why LSAC was tougher than the GRE makers on granting accommodations since the goal in the accommodations process is to make an even playing field for all test takers).
But LSAC currently has their hands tied behind their back in the sense that if a student gets double time on the GRE they will automatically receive double time on the LSAT because the new policy states that equivalent accommodations will be given on the LSAT as other standardized exams (which can be problematic as listed in the last paragraph)
I have noticed on recent LSATs there have been less inferences in LG's, a few rare games in LG; the conditional logic is still present but hidden in a subtler format...in these instances extra time has less of an effect on performance.....(I don't want to be guilty of a correlation/casuation error there because those changes could only merely be a part of the small tweaks the exam undergoes every few years....but I'm curious of if and how LSAC will respond to a higher % of test takers receiving accommodations)
Thanks as always for the great advice. ( I apologize in advance but my curiosity got to me when thinking about it)
I had a question as I will be seeking accommodations on the LSAT. (Hopefully I can get an answer from someone who is familiar with LSAC's new updated policies on accommodated testing).
Have there been any recent changes/or do you foresee any test design changes in the future( even slight ones) because of the lawsuit settlement and LSAC making it slightly easier to gain accommodations?
The new policy can make things a bit complicated because standardized tests measure different things: for example the GRE there is a high emphasis on vocabulary and math and if you don't know the words or know how to solve the problems granting a test taker extra time isn't going to help but on the LSAT granting extra time makes the problems easier to solve as time is a major issue for people with or without disabilities. (So I can understandably see why LSAC was tougher than the GRE makers on granting accommodations since the goal in the accommodations process is to make an even playing field for all test takers).
But LSAC currently has their hands tied behind their back in the sense that if a student gets double time on the GRE they will automatically receive double time on the LSAT because the new policy states that equivalent accommodations will be given on the LSAT as other standardized exams (which can be problematic as listed in the last paragraph)
I have noticed on recent LSATs there have been less inferences in LG's, a few rare games in LG; the conditional logic is still present but hidden in a subtler format...in these instances extra time has less of an effect on performance.....(I don't want to be guilty of a correlation/casuation error there because those changes could only merely be a part of the small tweaks the exam undergoes every few years....but I'm curious of if and how LSAC will respond to a higher % of test takers receiving accommodations)
Thanks as always for the great advice. ( I apologize in advance but my curiosity got to me when thinking about it)