If anxiety-related symptoms or another mental-health condition make taking the LSAT under standard conditions difficult, you may have a disability-related need for LSAT accommodations. Our licensed psychologists evaluate anxiety-related functional limitations and determine whether LSAT accommodations documentation, including LSAT extra time documentation when appropriate, is clinically supported.
You do not need prior LSAT accommodations approval to request an evaluation for LSAC accommodations documentation. However, LSAC requires evidence of disability and disability-related need. If you do not already have prior documentation, the reviewing psychologist will evaluate your clinical intake, Beck Anxiety Inventory results when applicable, symptom history, functional limitations, and any supporting information you provide.
The only way for our team to determine whether we can support your LSAT accommodations request is to complete the secure clinical intake form. A licensed psychologist will review your information and determine whether documentation for LSAT testing accommodations, such as extended time, additional breaks, or remote LSAT testing exceptions, is clinically appropriate.