- Wed Jul 10, 2019 10:12 pm
#66420
Hi toolitoncat - thanks for posting, and welcome to the Forum!
That's a good question without an absolute answer, I'm afraid. That is, LSAC does both: sometimes they reuse tests in their original format entirely, and sometimes it's only the four scored sections with a new experimental. So there isn't a standard practice in this particular regard.
To me what's most interesting is when they reuse the original experimental content...and that content has already made it's way onto another test as scored material! Perhaps the most notorious instance of this was with the infamous computer virus game that was real in September 2016, but first appeared (and tormented people) as experimental on the February 2013 exam. I bring that up because the Feb 13 test was reused as a fairly large-scale make-up test in October 2017, a year after the virus game was in public circulation, and LSAC kept it on the make-up test...a clear sign that that section was experimental, since they'd never re-test public content and have it be scored. So anyone who'd done September 16 and seen that game, and then faced it again on the make-up in October 17, knew straight away that what they were seeing that October was unscored (experimental). That gave a lot of people an edge, and was one of the clearest signals that LSAC does indeed reuse tests wholesale, experimentals and all.
I can't say whether that will happen on individual administrations where reuses occur, of course, but it does happen from time to time.
Jon Denning
PowerScore Test Preparation
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