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 35
This year, employment gaps between white law graduates and minoritized individuals worsened. Hard work remains for law schools and legal employers to close these gaps.
LSAC is committed to unlocking vital data to provide the entire legal education community the ability to confront challenges in the most effective manner, work toward concrete outcomes, and learn what works and what does not.
Effective September 3, 2024, we are making a few changes to our LSAC Fee Waiver program to increase the effectiveness of our assistance to all fee waiver recipients, and to help them be even more successful in pursuing their goal of legal education.
Although law school graduate employment data is strong now, current law students may face a tougher job market when they graduate.
After the unfortunate 2020 cancellation due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the Pre-Law Advisors National Council (PLANC) Quadrennial Conference is back! We’re looking forward to seeing prelaw advisors and law school representatives at this year's conference.
While the law school class of 2023 saw record-high employment numbers, this trend isn't likely to last, with lower overall employment rates predicted for those graduating law school in the next several years.
LSAC Law School Forums offer a convenient way for prospective law students to learn about JD, LLM, and law-related master’s degrees and certificate programs from law school representatives across the U.S. and Canada.
In a previous blog, Troy Lowry made a bold prediction about AI reshaping the legal landscape. A recent study shows that the integration of AI into the legal field may be slower than he thought.
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.
LSAC is excited to join the College Board in a new research project aimed at exploring relevant environmental context factors for law school/graduate admission.