Just a guess but I'm agreeing with @Kiva_180 because I don't think the proctoring website has the interface for the test so it probably has to be on the LawHub site.
I think once we know the formats---in-person, online, or blended--of universities and law schools during the upcoming year and whether the format affects tuition, it may influence the admissions numbers. Plus the employment numbers from the next few…
Is it schedule-able/workable to take it before the test? I remember reading that medicines are allowed at in-person tests, but can only be used during breaks. Please let us know the response if you contact them.
Your GPA is pretty good. It tells people you were a focused student in college. Your undergraduate institution(s) will be part of the LSAC calculation. Was this an American school? If so, your LSAC GPA will tell admissions lots of information ab…
Thanks for this information. So it was likely reset to run with a camera, microphone, and internet access? Would a mouse and external keyboard be allowed since it's allowed on laptops?
On the Proctoru site, it says they don't support tablets, but on Reddit people are talking about loaner tablets. Please let me know if you hear more details and I'll do the same. Thanks.
@jenellyperez, Seconding this. I realize the timeline had to be condensed, though am wishing there were trial tests to help see how these things play out before the real game.
The site has been changing a lot lately. I've been glad that Powerscore checks for updates and updates their Twitter because we don't always have time to go through pages upon pages at the same rate of the site changes.
@noonawoon, You're right. The only exceptions have been the 50/50 tablet v. paper test takers and the recent option extended to people registered for March/April 2020 with previous cancellations.
Drilling more games is often a good experience. Building endurance. Maybe seeing if you can score a 180 on a test and compare this to previous experiences. It sounds like you're well-prepared for June.
Thanks for the reply. For context, I was just trying to learn more about online proctoring and heard this stuff from Reddit forums where universities have used the program a fair amount for semester exams and such, and they quoted a paragraph about…