A blog exploring all aspects of law and legal education — the future of the legal profession, access to justice, diversity and inclusion, testing and assessment, law and technology, and more.
Displaying 10 of 226
With the continued growth and development of LSAC’s LawHub, Khan Academy and LSAC believe students will be best served by having one centralized place to go to prepare for the LSAT, and that place should be LawHub.
The pace at which artificial intelligence is evolving is nothing short of staggering, especially its potential to reshape the landscape of technology jobs.
Legal employment outcomes are one important marker that we can look to, to measure progress on law school and legal employers’ efforts to diversity the profession.
AI trains itself on data inputted by its users, sometimes picking up human traits like sarcasm in the process. Does this data ultimately improve AI?
October 19, 2023
This weekly blog series provides information on all you need to know about the LSAT, including upcoming deadlines, how to prepare for the test, how to avoid having your session flagged, and more.
This weekly blog series provides information on all you need to know about the LSAT, including upcoming deadlines, how to prepare for the test, how to avoid having your session flagged, and more.
The existing LSAT format will continue through the June 2024 test, then the August 2024 test will feature two Logical Reasoning sections and one Reading Comprehension section. Read about the transition to the new format.
Could AI be used to evaluate law school transcripts? Troy Lowry explores this question in his latest Law:Fully blog.
Every fall, LSAC publishes an interactive website that serves as a resource for schools, prelaw advisors, students, and many others who are interested in understanding the current admission cycle.
How can we detect AI-generated writing? Many tools market themselves as ChatGPT detectors, but are they effective?
Many people worry that AI will take their jobs, but the truth is more nuanced. While AI will likely change the law school admissions process, it will be a tool for admissions officers to utilize, not a replacement for human decision making.