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What is the LSDAS and how does it work with law school admissions?

admissions law school LSDAS
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What is the LSDAS and how does it work with law school admissions?

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The Law School Data Assembly Service (LSDAS) is the gatekeeper of many important documents for law school applicants. The LSDAS is a service provided by Law Services, the producers of the LSAT, and almost all ABA-approved law schools require the use of LSDAS reports in the admissions process. No school that uses the LSDAS will consider an applicant until their LSDAS report is complete. The LSDAS is required by law schools because it standardizes much of the information relevant to making admission decisions. Without such standardization, schools would have to sift through a colossal amount of disorganized information. For applicants, the LSDAS is a helpful tool in the admissions process. If an applicant is able to use all of the services included with registering for the LSDAS, the amount of work put into submitting applications is dramatically reduced.

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