5:52 AM Abraham Lincoln University, School of Law | ||||
Reply #10 on: July 02, , 05:09:32 PM I m sure you are right that there are a combination of factors. Still, I think there is probably a tipping point somewhere. I m sure some candidates simply cannot relocate to attend a T4 school, so they attend a distance learning school, but I imagine many of those students at a DL school performed poorly on the LSAT. It s been a while since I looked, but I think even Cal Western students have an average LSAT of over 150. In my state, I don t think you have to be that smart to pass the bar, so I can t imagine someone who gets 165 on the LSAT has a much better chance of passing the bar than someone who scored 155. There must be a tipping point though. Total assumption here. but in a state with a bar passage rate of 85%, you probably see something like this
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