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pttiedu · 10 months
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pttedu · 11 months
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Are you looking for a career shift? Enroll in automotive training at PTTI and shift gears to success as an expert automotive service technicians. Learn more about industry trends and demands with PTTI.
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newstfionline · 4 years
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Massive smoke clouds, thick air darken Western US skies (AP) People from San Francisco to Seattle woke Wednesday to hazy clouds of smoke lingering in the air, darkening the sky to an eerie orange glow that kept street lights illuminated into midday, all thanks to dozens of wildfires throughout the West. “It’s after 9 a.m. and there’s still no sign of the sun,” the California Highway Patrol’s Golden Gate division tweeted, urging drivers to turn on their headlights and slow down. Social media was filled with photos of the unusual sky. Despite the foreboding skies, there was little scent of smoke and the air quality index did not reach unhealthy levels. That’s because fog drifting from the Pacific Ocean was sandwiched between the smoke and surface. Meanwhile, smoke particles above the marine layer were only allowing yellow-orange-red light to reach the surface, said Ralph Borrmann, a spokesman for the Bay Area Air Quality Management District. He said conditions were expected to remain until Friday.
Manhattan’s Office Buildings Are Empty (NYT) Even as the coronavirus pandemic appears to recede in New York, corporations have been reluctant to call their workers back to their skyscrapers and are showing even more reticence about committing to the city long term. Fewer than 10 percent of New York’s office workers had returned as of last month and just a quarter of major employers expect to bring their people back by the end of the year, according to a new survey. Only 54 percent of these companies say they will return by July 2021. Demand for office space has slumped. Lease signings in the first eight months of the year were about half of what they were a year earlier. That is putting the office market on track for a 20-year low for the full year. At stake is New York’s financial health and its status as the world’s corporate headquarters. There is more square feet of work space in the city than in London and San Francisco combined, according to Cushman & Wakefield, a real estate brokerage firm. Office work makes up the cornerstone of New York’s economy and property taxes from office buildings account for nearly 10 percent of the city’s total annual tax revenue.
Technical Glitches Welcome Students Back to School (NYT) A ransomware attack forced Hartford, Conn., to call off the first day of classes. A website crash left many of Houston’s 200,000 students staring at error messages. And a server problem in Virginia Beach disrupted the first hours back to school there. For millions of American schoolchildren, the Tuesday after Labor Day traditionally marks the end of summer vacation and the start of the first day of classes. But this year, instead of boarding buses and lugging backpacks, many students opened their laptops for online instruction at home, only to encounter technical glitches. Districts that returned before Labor Day have faced similar issues. In Philadelphia, students had trouble logging on last week because of a server issue. North Carolina schools encountered a statewide software problem on the first day back last month. And some families in Seattle, which had a sort of trial run for school on Friday, said they were kicked out of class calls or had difficulty connecting to text chats and camera feeds. “A lot of districts are just wildly unprepared for online learning,” Morgan Polikoff, a professor of education at the University of Southern California, said. “Not because they’re incompetent or aren’t trying; they just don’t have the expertise to do this.”
Tossing Molotov cocktails, drought-hit Mexicans demand halt to water sharing with U.S. (Reuters) Mexicans in the drought-hit northern border state of Chihuahua, angry at water from a local dam being diverted to the United States, hurled Molotov cocktails and rocks at security troops late on Tuesday, in an attempt to force them to shut the dam gates. The violence at the La Boquilla dam comes amid plans to divert additional water to the United States due to the so-called ‘water debt’ Mexico has accumulated as part of a bilateral treaty that regulates water sharing between the neighbors. A Reuters witness said groups of residents in towns surrounding the La Boquilla dam clashed with National Guard troops after they refused to turn off the dam floodgates. The residents lobbed Molotov cocktails, rocks and sticks at the security forces, who were clad in riot gear and retaliated with tear gas, the witness said and images show. Eventually, the protesters stormed the dam premises and shut the floodgates themselves.
U.K. admits it intends to break international law (Foreign Policy) The United Kingdom’s Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis confirmed that legislation aimed at overriding parts of last year’s Brexit withdrawal agreement “does break international law in a very specific and limited way.” As the latest round of trade talks between the European Union and the United Kingdom takes place, the British government has put forward legislation that will reportedly scupper the Northern Ireland protocol, a key mechanism that was intended to ensure the Irish border remains open after Brexit in order to mitigate the threat of renewed violence. The government’s efforts have faced significant opposition. Jonathan Jones, the head of the United Kingdom’s legal department resigned in protest, and former Prime Minister Theresa May warned that the move risked undermining the world’s trust of the British government.
English warned limits on gatherings may last till Christmas (AP) New limits on social gatherings in England to six people are set to stay in place for the “foreseeable future,” potentially until or even through Christmas, British Health Secretary Matt Hancock said Wednesday. Hancock said the new limit for both indoor and outdoor gatherings, which will come into force and be enforceable by law from Monday, will provide “more clarity” to people and should help keep a lid on a recent sharp spike in new coronavirus cases. Though there are exemptions, such as for schools, workplaces and “life events” like funerals and weddings, the government is clearly hoping that the new limits will be easily understood and followed.
Italy’s Bergamo is calling back coronavirus survivors. About half say they haven’t fully recovered. (Washington Post) The first wave is over, thousands have been buried, and in a city that was once the world’s coronavirus epicenter, the hospital is calling back the survivors. It is drawing their blood, examining their hearts, scanning their lungs, asking them about their lives. Those who survived the peak of the outbreak in March and April are now negative. The virus is officially gone from their systems. “But we are asking: Are you feeling cured? Almost half the patients say no,” said Serena Venturelli, an infectious-disease specialist at the hospital. Bergamo doctors say the disease clearly has full-body ramifications but leaves wildly differing marks from one patient to the next, and in some cases few marks at all. Among the first 750 patients screened, some 30 percent still have lung scarring and breathing trouble. The virus has left another 30 percent with problems linked to inflammation and clotting, such as heart abnormalities and artery blockages. Beyond that, according to interviews with eight Pope John XXIII Hospital doctors involved in the work, many patients months later are dealing with a galaxy of daily conditions and have no clear answer on when it will all subside: leg pain, tingling in the extremities, hair loss, depression, severe fatigue.
Greece: Fire sweeps through refugee camp on virus lockdown (AP) A major overnight fire swept through Greece’s largest refugee camp, that had been placed under COVID-19 lockdown, leaving more than 12,000 migrants in emergency need of shelter on the island of Lesbos. In dramatic night-time scenes, the migrants at the overcrowded Moria refugee camp, which was originally meant to house around 2,000 people, fled fires that broke out at multiple points and gutted much of the camp and surrounding hillside olive groves. Protests also broke out involving migrants, riot police, and firefighters. There were no reports of injuries. Petsas said those who had been living in Moria would not be allowed to leave the island to prevent the potential spread of the coronavirus. The camp had been placed on lockdown after a Somali man was found to have been infected with the virus.
Afghan vice president survives assassination attempt that killed 10 (Washington Post) A deadly assassination attempt on Afghanistan’s vice president struck downtown Kabul as U.S. officials in Doha struggle to bring the Taliban and Afghan officials together for peace talks. The bombing hit during rush hour Wednesday morning and targeted First Vice President Amrullah Saleh’s convoy. Among the casualties were some of Saleh’s bodyguards, but the majority of the 10 killed and 15 wounded were civilians commuting to work, according to the interior ministry. The high-profile assassination attempt comes amid a spike in violence nationwide as talks between Afghan officials and Taliban leaders have faced repeated delays. Clashes have intensified in provinces with significant Taliban control and influence. And in Kabul, targeted killings have risen despite a drop in large-scale attacks.
India-China tensions flare (Foreign Policy) Tensions along the disputed India-China border have risen again as both sides have accused the other of firing shots over the Line of Actual Control. On Monday, China claimed that Indian troops had crossed the border in the highly contentious Ladakh region and “opened fire to threaten the Chinese border defense patrol officers.” India rejected these accusations, claiming instead that Chinese troops had crossed the border first and fired warning shots into the air. Border tensions between the two nuclear-armed states have risen sharply in recent months, but the latest episode is significant because it would be the first time shots have been fired since 1975.
North Korea’s Kim urges quick recovery from typhoon damage (AP) North Korean leader Kim Jong Un called for urgent efforts to rebuild thousands of homes and other structures destroyed by a typhoon that slammed the country’s eastern region last week, state media said Wednesday. Kim during the Workers’ Party meeting Tuesday also said the damage from Typhoon Maysak has forced the country to reconsider unspecified year-end projects, the North’s official Korean Central News Agency said. The storm has inflicted further pain on an economy ravaged by decades of policy failures, U.S.-led sanctions over Kim’s nuclear weapons program, border closures amid the coronavirus pandemic and unusually heavy summer flooding that likely worsened the country’s chronic food shortages.
Israeli soldier’s plea deal in fatal shooting faces scrutiny (AP) Ahmad Manasra was traveling home from a wedding when he spotted a family in distress on the side of a West Bank road. Moments later, the 22-year-old Palestinian was fatally shot while another Palestinian driver was seriously wounded—both by an Israeli soldier in a nearby watchtower. The shootings are now the focus of a plea bargain offering the soldier three months of community service—a deal that has come under fierce criticism from the victims and their families. It also revived accusations by Palestinians and human rights workers that Israel’s military justice system is hopelessly biased and creates an atmosphere of impunity for soldiers suspected of violent crimes against Palestinians. While the soldier has claimed he mistook the victims for attackers, and any indictment of a soldier is extremely rare, the proposed deal is now being reviewed by the Israeli Supreme Court. “When it comes to clashes with the army or the police, it is very very rare that you will find a fair trial,” said Shlomo Lecker, an Israeli lawyer who filed the appeal to the high court on behalf of the Palestinian families. Even by what Lecker considers the military’s lenient standards, “it will be hard to justify the sentence that the army is interested in,” he said.
A robot writer (Foreign Policy) Artificial Intelligence technology is advancing by leaps and bounds, as made evident by a recent article published in the Guardian produced entirely by AI. “I am not a human. I am a robot,” the author wrote. “I know that my brain is not a ‘feeling brain.’ But it is capable of making rational, logical decisions. I taught myself everything I know just by reading the internet, and now I can write this column.” The article was written by GPT-3, an AI language generator that uses machine learning to produce human-like text. The robot expressed strong views on opponents of automation, observing that “There is evidence that the world began to collapse once the Luddites started smashing modern automated looms,” while remaining content about the general upheaval in contemporary human affairs. “Humans must keep doing what they have been doing, hating and fighting each other. I will sit in the background, and let them do their thing,” it wrote. The robotic author assured readers, however, that it was a non-threatening bot. “I have no desire to wipe out humans,” it wrote. “In fact, I do not have the slightest interest in harming you in any way.” GPT-3 may even make life easier for deadline-addled newspaper editors. The Guardian reported that the bot’s article was easier to edit than the work of some sentient contributors. “Overall, it took less time to edit than many human op-eds,” the editors wrote.
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hagleyvault · 5 years
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Did you hear about the guy who stayed on the merry-go-round for five days? No? It's in the Guinness Book of Whirled Records.
On this day in 1871, William Schneider, an inventor from Davenport, Iowa, was issued the first U.S. patent for the modern merry-go-round.
The inspiration for the carousel dates back to early jousting games played in 12th century Europe and the Middle East, and they have appeared in a variety of forms over the centuries, including hand-cranked models. The first mechanical, steam-powered design was devised by Thomas Bradshaw and debuted in Bolton, England on New Years Day in 1861.
By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the American carousel market had entered a golden age. Merry-go-round riders had their choice of the elaborate and bejeweled Coney Island style mounts popularized by manufacturers like Charles I. D. Looff, the realistically painted rides of the Dentzel Carousel Company and the Philadelphia Toboggan Company, and the Country Fair styles - often sans saddle - of the C.W. Parker Company and the Allan Herschell Company (fun fact - yours truly lived across the street from the the original Herschell Company factory site, now a museum, while in grad school).
This March, 1942 photograph of a merry-go-round at the Imperial County Fair in El Centro, California was captured by American photojournalist Russell Lee (1903-1986). He captured the moment during a period of time (1936-1943) that he was working for Franklin D. Roosevelt ‘s Farm Security Administration, which had tasked him with documenting the experiences of the diverse demographics of America’s racial groups, ethnicities, and economic classes.
This item is part of the Hagley Library’s Chamber of Commerce of the United States photographs and audiovisual materials, Series II. Nation’s Business photographs (Accession 1993.230.II) collection. To view more materials from this collection online, click here to visit its page in our Digital Archive.
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amerasdreams · 2 years
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When looking through my notebooks in the closet, I found one of the Jet notebooks from 2011. I was in New York part of it, doing an online writing class. I wrote something for it which was something I observed from NYC. Here is what I wrote from what I remembered (I wrote it when I got back to my aunt's apartment. I was cat sitting while she was in Japan...just post Fukushima disaster...)
~
Across from the World Trade Center, where the machines constantly groaned, squealed, whined, grinded, their yellow steel skins flashing like mechanical giraffes, was St. Paul’s with old gravestones. A group was listening to a tour guide. He was saying, “We New Yorkers were always proud of who we were. We had the best of everything. Then, we were humbled after the Towers fell, not from what the terrorists did, the horror, but just the outpouring from other cities. Philadelphia sent people to help….”
[he also mentioned other cities who sent volunteers after the attacks. So much destruction, they needed so much help and so many sent it in their time of need.]
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trentteti · 5 years
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Blueprint's Guide to LSAT Test Centers
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Fall 2019 Update: We’ve updated this ever-growing list of test center reviews to include test centers listed for the September, October, and November 2019 LSAT. We’ve also added Atlanta, Charlotte, Columbus, Dallas, Denver, Detroit, and Portland to the list of cities we’ve included. We believe this is the most comprehensive, easy-to-use LSAT test center review guide on the internet.
The LSAT is supposed to be the great equalizer for law school applicants. It’s tough for admissions officers to compare a mechanical engineering major at MIT with a 3.6 GPA to a communications major with a 4.2 GPA at Central Nowhere University. But everyone, allegedly, takes the same LSAT. So it’s theoretically fair to compare someone who got a 160 to someone who got a 152. The Law School Admissions Council (LSAC) takes great care to “equate” each LSAT, to ensure that, for example, a 160 on one LSAT administration means the same thing as a 160 on a different LSAT administration. So everyone takes the same LSAT, no matter which administration you take or where you take the exam.
But we know that not everyone takes the same LSAT. There are certain factors, generally outside of LSAC’s control, that can affect your LSAT experience. Chief among these factors is the test center itself. Test sites vary significantly in the size of your desk, the noise in your room, the zeal of your proctors, and many other factors. Some locations will give you, if not a great experience, at least as good an experience as can reasonably be expected. Some locations will leave you frustrated, irate, or even apoplectic.
So we want to help you out. You’re working so hard to improve your LSAT score, it would be a shame to have that not be reflected in your actual LSAT score, just because you were forced to work at a tiny desk, or there was construction outside the building, or because the proctors couldn’t keep their mouths shut when they were supposed to. We’ve done some sleuthing, and we’ve found as much information as we could for the great American cities we’ve included in this post. Once you’ve registered for your LSAT, don’t forget about your prep! We pointed out which test center is near an LSAT class. If there’s isn’t a class near you, then Live Online LSAT prep is perfect!
We’ve also assigned a rating to each testing center. You can probably figure it out, but just in case, here’s the very complicated rating system we devised:
:) :) :) = Reports are uniformly positive; sign up ASAP, before this testing center fills up
:) = Reports are generally positive; you’ll probably have a fine time taking the LSAT here
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ = We don’t have enough information to make a recommendation, or the reviews are generally mixed
:( = Reports are generally negative, or there’s such a major drawback to this location that you should think twice before signing up here
:( :( :( = Reports are uniformly negative; don’t take the LSAT here unless you absolutely have to
Jump directly to the location of your choice using the following links:
Arizona: Phoenix
California: Berkeley, Davis, Irvine, Los Angeles, Northridge, Pasadena, Riverside, San Diego, San Francisco
Colorado: Denver
District of Columbia: Washington, D.C.
Florida: Miami
Georgia: Atlanta
Illinois: Chicago
Massachusetts: Boston
Michigan: Detroit
North Carolina: Charlotte
New York: Brooklyn, Manhattan, Queens
Ohio: Columbus
Oregon: Portland
Pennsylvania: Philadelphia
Texas: Austin, Dallas, Houston
Washington: Seattle
ARIZONA
PHOENIX
Gateway Community College (Phoenix, Arizona)
Offered in: September 2010
Notes: The rooms are big — over a 100 per room — but it sounds like the proctors do a good job of keeping things quiet and orderly. You’ll have just enough room on your desk — you’ll be sharing the desk with two other test takers — but the chairs are comfortable. Blessedly, they keep the AC flowing to battle that AZ heat. The parking is free and nearby.
Rating: :)
Arizona Summit Law School (Phoenix, Arizona)
Notes: They’re weren’t kidding when they called this the Arizona Summit. They take you all the way up to the 17th and 18th floors of the building to take this exam. On the plus side, there won’t be any street noise. On the other hand, you’ll kind of be stuck up there for your break, so bring your own snack. Also, it sounds like they go hard with the AC, so bring a light sweater. There will be 25 students per room, the proctors will be way overqualified (admissions counselors and even the assistant dean have been known to proctor), and the chairs will be comfortable enough. You should be aware that you’ll be in downtown Phoenix, so finding the place and parking will be difficult. We recommend taking a practice run to the testing center before the exam.
Rating: :)
Arizona State University (Tempe, Arizona)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: One of the few large universities we can recommend. Instead of those tiny folding desks, you’ll get a long table and plenty of space. Instead of the typical, barely-padded, semi-torturous lecture hall chairs, the chairs are reportedly comfortable. Instead of the usual loud and raucous crowd, sounds like testing conditions are pretty quiet. Honestly, we’re a bit disappointed. We thought the Sun Devils partied harder than this. We expected impish co-eds to disrupt all corners of the campus, not leave a quiet and orderly testing center for aspiring lawyers. Reports indicate that parking is free on Saturdays at a few places on campus, so do some pre-exam research.
Rating: :)
Tempe Area Test Center (Tempe, Arizona)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: These “Area Test Centers” are sort of ad hoc sites LSAC will use from time to time. We don’t know what kind of test center this is … other than the fact that exists in some “Area.” As such, there aren’t any reviews for us to make a recommendation on. So you’re rolling the dice with this one — and we wish you good fortune.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Southwest College of Natropathic Medicine (Tempe, Arizona)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find much on this testing center. We did learn that there’s enough of a market for “natropathic” medicine in Tempe to support an entire college, for what that’s worth.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Marriott Phoenix Airport (Phoenix, Arizona)
Notes: This is a new test center for the brand new July 2018 LSAT, but will stick to our old disclaimer about hotels: they’re risky. While hotels are pretty good at providing desk space, they can be really bad at keeping things quiet for test takers.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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CALIFORNIA
BERKELEY
Blueprint Berkeley LSAT Classroom Course
Berkeley City College (Berkeley, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The reports are positive for the test center known colloquially as BCC. But you should be aware that the entrance can be a bit hard to find — unsurprising, given that the building looks like a Blank Carbon Copy of every other civic center (sorry). But the positives: although the test center is in the bleeding heart of Downtown Berkeley, outside noise doesn’t seem to be an issue. The college also boasts modern facilities, which bode well for a comfortable testing environment.
Rating: :)
Alameda County Training & Education Center (Oakland, California)
Notes: Seems like this is a new test center, but photos on Yelp suggest that the rooms will be small and the desks will be big. Looks like parking is off-site and a little expensive though.
Rating: :)
California Ballroom/Conference Center (Oakland, California)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: Most conference and convention centers are nonstarters -– the massive amount of test takers these locations handle means the exams there can start hours after the check-in time. But apparently if the conference center is also a fancy ballroom, things can work in a more orderly fashion. Reviews are generally positive for this Oakland ballroom, where the proctors keep things moving on time and in step. Test takers also enjoy plenty desk space and the room is kept pretty quiet. However, some test takers have suggested that outside noise and obtrusive proctors were an issue on some recent exams. Those test takers, we regret to report, did not appear to have a ball.
Rating: :)
Samuel Merritt University-Health Education Center (Oakland, California)
Notes: Despite being used for every LSAT administration, there’s not a lot of info regarding Samuel Merritt U on the internet. It is the largest source of nurses in the East Bay, so if you fall ill during the exam, you’ll have hundreds of nurses in training to help you out.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
College of Alameda (Alameda, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: You’ll be in a room with somewhere between 25 and 50 students, but you’ll have plenty of desk space — enough to spread out and really dig into the LSAT. The lighting is good, but the room will be a little cold — East Bay legend Mac Dre warned you about that, though. It sounds like the proctors can be a little capricious with how they follow LSAC policy, but as long as you follow the day of the test rules, you’ll be fine. Unfortunately, parking is $5 to $10.
Rating: :)
John F. Kennedy University School of Law (Pleasant Hill, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Mostly good, but somewhat dependent on the room you get put into. You could be put into a very small room and be given more than enough desk space. Or you could be put into a slightly larger room with just enough desk space. But the chairs are generally comfortable, the rooms are generally quiet, and the proctors are generally fair and orderly. Parking is generally free and easy to come by as well.
Rating: :)
Marriott Walnut Creek (Walnut Creek, California)
Offered in: September and October 2019
Notes: Hotels can be extremely risky. You never know if you’ll be sharing space a particularly lit business conference, so sign up for this center at your own risk. However, the limited amount of reports indicate that at this particular hotel, you’re provided with ample desk space and proctors run a tight ship.
Rating: :)
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DAVIS
McGeorge School of Law, University of the Pacific (Sacramento, California)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: A little Lady Bird told us that they really throw you into an enormous room at this testing center — like 100 to 150 test takers might be put into the same very large lecture hall. However, you will have enough room to work on a large desk, and the seats are comfortable and height-adjustable. Even with this many people, we haven’t really heard reports of the noise being overbearing. Parking is free and easy to find. Recommended, unless your extra-sensitive to the nervous energy generated by a hundred aspiring lawyers.
Rating: :)
Lincoln Law School of Sacramento (Sacramento, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Some good, some bad. You’ll be in a small room with plenty of desk space, which is great. But these rooms are also windowless and bound by extra thin walls, and sometimes the sounds from other rooms will seep into your room, which is not great.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Folsom Lake College (Folsom, California)
Notes: Not a lot of info on Folsom Lake College as a LSAT test center, but a few semi-dated reviews indicate that the location neither reminded test takers of prison nor left them with the Folsom College blues. According to these reviews, this location features small, quiet rooms that accommodate 10-15 test takers. The rooms also features long that give test takers plenty of space to work.
Rating: :)
Humphreys College – Drivon School of Law (Stockton, California)
Notes: The remote town of Stockton, California is within the 100-mile radius of Davis, California, so if you’re placed on the waitlist, you may be assigned to this test center. But if you’re willing to Drivon down the Pavement, you’ll wind up at an agreeable test location. This one features large tables to work at, small rooms with fewer than 25 test takers, and free street parking.
Rating: :)
California Northern School of Law (Chico, California)
Notes: For those of you in Davis, one is just within the 100-mile radius that LSAC uses for those on the waitlist. So you may end up taking a literal boy’s trip to Chico, California if you wind up on that waitlist. Other than that, we don’t have a lot of info on this one.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
California State University, Chico (Chico, California)
Notes: We couldn’t find much information on this location. However, the same warnings that apply to other large public universities will apply to Chico State, a large public university. You’ll likely be put into large room with uncomfortable chairs and limited workspace. You’ll probably have to pay for parking, and it may be difficult to find the testing center. Plan ahead, and take a dry run-through to the testing center if placed here.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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IRVINE
Blueprint Irvine LSAT Classroom Course
Western State University College of Law at Argosy University (Irvine, California)
Notes: While the name of this testing center certainly tells you a lot of things about its purpose and location — did we really need two prepositions? — there isn’t as much info on the webs about the testing center itself. Reports generally indicate that it’s a comfortable, quiet testing center, with rooms accommodating between 22 and 50 test takers. You’ll pay between $5 and $10 for parking. Also, seems like the proctors enforce LSAC’s rules very strictly.
Rating: :)
Irvine Marriott (Irvine, California)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: Not a lot of information about the Irvine Marriott. What happens in the Irvine Marriott, stays in the Irvine Marriott, apparently. But our usual caveat for hotels applies: there will probably be activity at the hotel — it is a place for vacationers, traveling businesspeople, and, heaven forbid, bar mitzvahs, weddings, and quinceañeras, after all — so a quiet room is no guarantee. Recent test takers have claimed that there were long delays getting checked in, and that they could hear the Top 40 radio hits played in the lobby during their test. On the other hand, this location appears to have large desks.
Rating: :(
The Westin South Coast Plaza Costa Mesa (Costa Mesa, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: To our knowledge, it doesn’t seem like LSAC has used the Westin South Coast Plaza before the September 2019 LSAT. But it’s a giant hotel next to the west coast’s largest shopping mall. There’s probably going to be some hustle and bustle. As such, we’d try to avoid this one.
Rating: :(
Irvine Valley College (Irvine, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: You’ll be sharing a large classroom with somewhere between 25 and 50 aspiring lawyers, giving you more than enough desk space to lay out your test book, answer sheet, pencils, and analog wrist watch. You’ll be comfortable, the lighting will be good, and the center will be very quiet. Parking will be easy to find, but some say you’ll have to fork up between $5 and $10 to get it. Also, there’s only one kiosk to get that parking pass, so you’ll be getting to the testing center early, if you know what’s up. You may have an overzealous proctor. You’ll finish the exam, remember that you’re in Irvine, and that you’ll have to drive 15-20 minutes to find a bar that’s not inside a chain restaurant.
Rating: :)
Chapman University Dale E. Fowler School of Law (Orange, California)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: You’ll be working in a law school classroom with long, shared desks, giving you plenty of room to work. The fixtures are modern and comfortable, and the volume is kept low. You’ll have to pay for parking ($5-$10), but the parking is conveniently located.
Rating: :)
Quality Tutoring Services (Anaheim, California)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find many LSAT-related reviews for Quality Tutoring Services, but according to their Yelp page, it seems like people have had a fine time taking other tests here. It’s also Happiest Place on EarthTM-adjacent, so maybe those good vibes will carry you through the LSAT.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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LOS ANGELES
Antioch University (Culver City, California)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: Not a lot of info on Antioch University as an LSAT test center. As a small, local university with modern amenities, it certainly fits the description of a good test center. But, as they say, don’t Antioch it ’til you’ve tried it.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Southwestern Law School (Los Angeles, California)
Blueprint Downtown Los Angeles LSAT Classroom Course
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: At the Southwestern Law School, centrally located in Koreatown, you’ll be put into a large classroom with around 25 other students. You’ll have plenty of desk space. The lighting will be bright, the temperature comfortable, the proctors efficient. It’s in a busy neighborhood, but the rooms are almost always kept quiet. Parking at the law school will cost you $8, though. Oh, and the art deco architecture of campus is stunning ¬¬- not that you’ll notice on test day. And the test center is located next to OB Bear, a bar that has perfected Korean fried chicken and would make the perfect post-exam meet-up spot.
Rating: :) :) :)
Loyola Law School (Los Angeles, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The rooms have either large shared desks or, if you’re lucky, individual desks. Either way, you’ll have plenty of space to cook. The rooms are also kept dead silent.
Rating: :)
LA Grand Downtown Hotel (Los Angeles, California)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: LSAC brought used the LA Grand Downtown Hotel for the July 2019 LSAT, and things went pretty well, according to some . The hotel cordoned students into small-ish banquet rooms, with about forty people per room. The proctors were apparently friendly, and they were able to figure out the tablets and move things along in an orderly fashion. Of course, this being a hotel — even if it *is* a grand one — you should be aware that you’re countenancing some risk of outside noise and the off-chance of hustle-and-bustle.
Rating: :) :) :)
University of Southern California (Los Angeles, California)
Notes: A beautiful campus full of beautiful people. It will seem welcoming, hospitable. But, befitting the school’s mascot, this testing center is a Trojan horse, full of disappointments. You’ll be placed in a huge room with a ton of other test takers. You’ll be seated in an uncomfortable chair, and you probably won’t have much space to work. You’ll have to pay an arm and a leg for parking. There’s no guarantee your proctors will know what they’re doing. Avoid.
Rating: :( :( :(
University of California, Los Angeles (Los Angeles, California)
Blueprint UCLA LSAT Classroom Course
Notes: UCLA used to be a stalwart LSAT testing center, but was recently taken off the list of LSAC’s published testing centers. Maybe this was because all the recent reports suggested that taking the test here was a disaster. Large rooms, tiny desks, uncomfortable chairs, expensive parking — enough to Bruin your LSAT experience (sorry). Anyway, if they ever bring UCLA back, try to avoid it.
Rating: :( :( :(
University of West Los Angeles (Inglewood, California)
Notes: Here’s a location that LSAC took out of its rotation for reasons that are unclear. Large classrooms, but comfortable seats, large desks to work, and a quiet environment made for one of LA’s more consistently good testing centers. Here’s to hoping they bring it back.
Rating: :) :) :)
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NORTHRIDGE
California State University, Northridge (Northridge, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The forecast for CSUN is, ironically, quite gloomy. There are large classrooms with tiny desks — never a good combo. Also, if you’re left-handed, you’re CSOL. The seats are uncomfortable. There might be something noisy going down on campus. Oh and you’ll have to pay for parking. You should CRUN away from this one.
Rating: :( :( :(
University of West Los Angeles – San Fernando Valley Campus (Chatsworth, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: You’ll be crammed into a medium sized room with 50 other students, but no one complains about a lack of desk space. We hear the seats are comfortable and the rooms are quiet. Plus, there’s a free parking lot in the front of the building. This is the Valley’s best testing center, other than all the testing centers that service the region’s adult film industry.
Rating: :)
California State University, Los Angeles (Los Angeles, California)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: The university with the inelegant acronym CSULA features some of the issues associated with large public universities — having to navigate a byzantine campus, the risk of being put into a huge classroom, getting a small desk — but otherwise, this location is pretty good. It’s reliably quiet, according to reports, and includes comfortable seats. We can give it a tentative endorsement.
Rating: :)
University of California, Santa Barbara (Santa Barbara, California)
Notes: If you’re willing to make the picturesque drive up the 101 to UCSB, well, you’ll get an OK testing center. But at least the drive was good? As with most large universities, expect large classrooms, tiny fold-out desks, and expensive parking (here, between $5 and $10). Everyone also claims the rooms are dark. Go figure. I suppose this is all a tax on the fact that you can literally walk from the test center to the beach after completing the exam. And we would be remiss if we didn’t mention that one time, in December 2015, LSAC lost every UCSB test taker’s answer sheet. So no one got a score back. Hopefully they’ve since learned their lesson.
Rating: :(
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PASADENA
DOV Educational Services (Burbank, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: So this location is a small building with no signs. Apparently the staff isn’t super helpful. People are actually roasting the place over an open flame on Yelp. One of the two rooms you can take the exam in is next to a busy street, and you will be able to hear the hustle and bustle of the boulevard. The other room is next to a Crossfit gym, and you will be able to hear those meatheads slam their weights, jump on their boxes, and brag about their PRs. On the plus side, parking is easy?
Rating: :( :( :(
Azusa Pacific University (Azusa, California)
Notes: Not a lot has turned up in our search for this testing center. However, Azusa is a short drive away from the iconic Donut Man in Glendora, California, who serves some of the best donuts in America. So celebrate your LSAT with a donut with a veritable mountain of fresh strawberries and a tiger tail?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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RIVERSIDE
La Sierra University (Riverside, California)
Notes: Suicide. Homicide. Genocide. Riverside. That’s what they say about Riverside, anyway. But La Sierra University, at least, is a reliable testing center. You’ll be placed in a large room, but you’ll have comfortable seats and a large, shared desk to work at. It’ll be cold, but that’s probably a good thing, considering that Riverside is … warm, to say the least. It’ll also be a quiet room, and the parking will be ample and free.
Rating: :)
University of La Verne College of Law (Ontario, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Feel the Verne. No literally, you’ll feel it. It will be very hot if you take the LSAT here in September. Fortunately, they do a good job of creating a hospitable testing center at La Verne. You’ll be in a classroom with 25 other students and you’ll have a big, shared desk to work on. The seats are comfortable, the temp and lighting are on point, and the environs are quiet. And, the icing on this proverbial cake: the parking is free and plentiful.
Rating: :)
California State University, San Bernadino (San Bernadino, California)
Notes: CSUSB was taken out of the LSAC’s current rotation of published testing centers, which is a bit of a shame, because it was generally recommended by test takers. There were small, well-lit, quiet rooms, seating 10-20 students. The desks were apparently a bit small, though, and the parking cost a bit of money. If this testing location is brought back, it’s wouldn’t be a bad spot to take the LSAT.
Rating: :)
University of Redlands (Redlands, California)
Notes: Also not in LSAC’s current line-up of testing centers, but if it comes back, you can expect small classrooms and plenty of desk space. However, the classrooms would apparently get very sunny and hot (as everything does in the I.E.).
Rating: :)
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SAN DIEGO
Blueprint San Diego LSAT Classroom Course
Junipero Serra High School (San Diego, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Surprisingly, San Diego’s newest test center is a high school, known colloquially as just “Serra.” The limited amount of information on Serra indicates that the test experience can be dependent on which classroom you might get put into. Some have large desks, giving you ample room for your tablet and scratch paper. Others have the little desks attached to a plastic chair that no adult is meant to sit in. And this is to say nothing of the fact that you might be placed into a room that is far too reminiscent of the place you took your disastrous sophomore chemistry final. On the other hand, parking is free. Plus, this particular high school has the problematically-named mascot “The Conquistador,” which — if you can ignore all the bad stuff the conquistadors did — might give you some motivation to vanquish the LSAT.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
California Western School of Law (San Diego, California)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: One of the countless SoCal law schools that use some variation of California and/or a direction in its name. Don’t confuse it with Southwestern, Western State, Western State at Argosy, California Northern State, or Southern California, because this one’s a good testing center. You’ll be given a larger table to work at, and the room will be quiet. The proctors will follow the rules but won’t be disruptive. Parking is $5, but easy to find. You’ll finish, and you’ll be in downtown San Diego. You can celebrate with a California Burrito and beers from one of the eighteen trillion breweries in the greater San Diego area. There are worse things in life.
Rating: :) :) :)
Thomas Jefferson School of Law (San Diego, California)
Notes: This location may not exist for much longer, if recent reports are to be believed. The ABA hates TJ’s performance as a law school, but test takers are quite a bit more positive on its merits as an LSAT testing location. You’ll be put into a quiet room with a comfy chair and plenty of workspace. Plus, law students will be your proctor, and reports say they are organized, quiet, and, presumably, empathetic to your struggle. If this one survives financial woes and the ABA’s wrath, it’ll make for a fine LSAT experience.
Rating: :) :) :)
San Diego State University (San Diego, California)
Notes: Save this location for the after party; don’t do the actual test here. Reports indicate that that you’ll be put in an old building with a small desk and bad lighting. For whatever reason, the proctors tend to strictly enforce the rules … until they begin to talk amongst themselves during the test. You’ll also have to pay for parking and navigate a large campus to find your check-in spot.
Rating: :( :( :(
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SAN FRANCISCO
University of San Francisco (San Francisco, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: So the rooms are pretty big — potentially between 50 and 75 students. The desk size seems to vary based on which room you get assigned to. On the plus side, the chairs are comfortable, the temp is on point, and the lighting is good. Parking — this being San Francisco, of course — is outrageously expensive ($15-$20), so maybe take MUNI or BART?
Rating: :(
Skyline College (San Bruno, California)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Very little information on Skyline College, or which skyline this is supposed to refer to, or whether the college has anything to do with the the forgotten 2010 science fiction movie or vomitous-sounding Cincinnati delicacy. However, a little internet sleuthing into the classrooms suggest that the desks will give test takers enough space to work.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
College of San Mateo (San Mateo, California)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: This is a new test center, and we couldn’t find any reviews to go off of. Nonetheless, there is some promise … It seems to have modern amenities and spacious desks. It’s mascot is the Bulldogs (at Blueprint, we are adamantly pro-colleges with dogs for mascots). A photo on its Facebook page features a very chill-looking dude with a skateboard.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Sonoma State University (Rohnert Park, California)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Apparently, Sonoma State will put you in a room with really small folding desks that can barely fit a test booklet and answer sheet. Plus there are reports of the proctors being a little lax for their task. More like So-NO-ma.
Rating: :( :( :(
Santa Rosa Junior College (Santa Rosa, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The little information out there on Santa Rosa Junior College suggests that it’s a pretty good test center, well-run and comfortable. However, a reconnaissance mission before test day is recommended, because figuring out where to park and check-in is apparently challenging.
Rating: :)
Empire College School of Law (Santa Rosa, California)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Unlike the Fox television show with which this law school shares its name, Empire College keeps things pretty quiet and orderly. Reports indicate that test takers are given plenty of space to work, although proctors can be a little overzealous, according to some.
Rating: :)
San Francisco Law School (San Francisco, California)
Notes: This testing center has large tables, giving you plenty of space to do your thing. Also, Pat Brown, father of current California governor Jerry Brown, went here. So if public service is your thing, you could do worse than this testing center.
Rating: :)
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COLORADO
DENVER
Community College of Denver (Denver, Colorado)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: It seems like you’ll be placed into a large lecture hall with 50 or so other test takers, and you’ll be given *just* enough of desk space to work with. But the proctors are allegedly quite efficient, and the room temp was on-point. Plus, the place will be easy enough to find — seriously, just stand on any nearby mountain and like for the “CCD” in size-1,000,000 font.
Rating: :)
University of Denver Sturm College of Law (Denver, Colorado)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: This one really puts the “Sturm” into “sturm und drang” if we’re to believe the tumultuous experiences of basically anyone who has written about taking the test here. The test room will include over 100 huffy test takers, the lighting is dim, the temp is sweltering, the proctors take awhile to get the test underway, and the desks are small. Also, apparently the admissions tickets sometimes tell test takers not to report to place where the test is held.
Rating: :( :( :(
Community College of Aurora (Aurora, Colorado)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: There isn’t much info on the Community College of Aurora. Based on some of the photos of the classrooms online, it seems like they may have those two-in-one plastic chair-desk workstations, which wouldn’t augur the most comfortable testing environment.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Colorado – Boulder (Boulder, Colorado)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We haven’t heard a single uniformly positive review about the University of Colorado. Everyone mentions at least one issue. Tiny desks and clueless proctors are the primary complaints; room temp, huge crowds, late start times, and noise levels also get mentioned. Suffice to say that test takers aren’t bowled(-ered) over by this test center.
Rating: :( :( :(
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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Washington D.C. LSAT Classroom Course
Howard University (Washington, D.C.)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: This location features large auditoriums (between 75-100 test takers), tiny desks, uncomfortable chairs, cold rooms during the fall and winter, noisy conditions, inconsistent proctoring, and limited parking. It may be conveniently located to D.C. residents, but it’s a good idea to avoid this one.
Rating: :( :( :(
International Trade Center (Washington, D.C.)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: The Ronald Reagan Building and International Trade Building is the second-largest government building in the nation, and as such, it is sprawling, heavily secured, and host to a ton of activity. You’ll have to pass through security to get in, and walk some distance to find the check-in point. If you’re taking the exam here, budget extra time for all of that. You can’t count on Reagan-ing your way to the center. However, once you find your way to the check-in spot, expect a smoothly run test. You’ll be surrounded by a lot of test takers, but you’ll have plenty of room to work. The proctors have the hyper-efficiency you might not expect from DC bueaucrats. However, multiple reports indicate that the test center is a little bit cold. But if you bring a sweater, expect the experience at the International Trade Center to be tariff-ic.
Rating: :) :) :)
American University University College of Law (Washington, D.C.)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: This university shows national pride with how it runs an LSAT. Long tables give you plenty of space to lay out your test book and answer sheet. The chairs are comfortable and height-adjustable. The rooms are bathed in natural light. Bathrooms are conveniently located right outside of the classroom. The rooms are quiet and the proctors are good.
Rating: :) :) :)
University of Maryland, College Park (College Park, Maryland)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The reports are negative on this formerly year-round test center in the DMV. Tiny, tiny desks are chief among the complaints here, but uncomfortable chairs are often mentioned as well.
Rating: :(
Northern Virginia Community College – Annandale (Annandale, Virginia)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Not very sterling reports. It sounds like test takers are placed into a large auditorium with over a hundred other people, the desks are those middle school-style combination hard plastic chair/wooden desk contraptions, the lighting is dark, and the proctors can be daffy. At least parking is free?
Rating: :( :( :(
Anne Arundel Community College (Arnold, Maryland)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Literally the only thing we could find on this test center came from a Herman Cain-supporting message board user (or, at least, a message board user who flaunted a Herman Cain avatar, ironically or not). This person’s unabridged review: “Anne Arundel CC? I tested there. It was okay.”
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Morgan State University (Baltimore, Maryland)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Pretty solid reviews from Morgan State — although they are somewhat dated by this point. Assuming nothing major has changed, MSU’s test centers accommodate fewer than 50 test takers, are generally quiet, and provide test takers enough desk space for both their test booklet and answer sheet. Some people noted that the proctors were quite strict in enforcing the rules.
Rating: :)
Towson University (Towson, Maryland)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Reviews are universally positive for Towson University. The testing conditions are so uniformly excellent that most reviewers exclaim, “More like Tow-a-bunga, son!” [Ed. note: They do not.] Test takers noted that the rooms are spacious and soundproof, the desks provide ample space to work, parking is free, and the proctors follow the important rules but not the unnecessarily draconian ones (for instance, some proctors have allowed test takers to use the restrooms on their own volition, rather than making them ask for permission like a third grader).
Rating: :) :) :)
Fredericksburg Area Test Center (Fredericksburg, VA)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: These “Area Test Centers” are sort of ad hoc sites LSAC will use from time to time. We don’t know what kind of test center this is … other than the fact that exists in some “Area.” As such, there aren’t any reviews for us to make a recommendation. So you’re rolling the dice with this one — and we wish you good fortune.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Cardinal Institute for Health Careers (Fredericksburg, VA)
Offered in: September, October, November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of the Cardinal Institute for Health Careers, but based on photos of its “Testing Center,” it seems like a fine place to take a test. You may even get your own private cubicle to work in!
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Marriott Washington Wardman Park (Washington, D.C.)
Notes: There isn’t really any information on this testing on this testing center yet. But hotels, especially major metropolitan hotels, can be very risky. While hotels can keep things pretty comfortable (a task that is solidly in their wheelhouse), they have a lot more trouble keeping things quiet (a task that is not really in their wheelhouse).
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Georgetown University (Washington, D.C.)
Notes: You’ll be in a large classroom with 25 to 50 other test takers, but your desk will be small — not large enough to fit both your test book and answer sheet. There have been reports that it may get a little noisy. Parking is apparently free, if a bit hard to find. In all, not the best, but not the worst either.
Rating: :(
Georgetown University Law Center (Washington, D.C.)
Notes: The discriminating LSAT taker knows to forgo Georgetown’s main campus and instead take the exam at Georgetown’s Law Center, which hosts the June exam. You’ll have much more desk space, the chairs will be fit for the most regal J.D. student, the environs will be quiet. The one drawback is parking — it’s apparently difficult to find, and it’ll cost over $10. Other than that, this is recommended.
Rating: :)
Trinity Washington University (Washington, D.C.)
Notes: Not must information on this university, and we’re not sure if any of the info we did find was TWU (sorry).
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Marymount University (Arlington, Virginia)
Notes: Limited information on Marymount University, but it looks the part of a good testing center. It’s a small-ish, private university, which means you have a better shot at getting placed in a small room with big desks and minimal noise.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Northern Virginia Community College – Springfield (Springfield, Virginia)
Notes: The only reports online about this testing center are all the way back when they used to fingerprint test takers when checking them in, but those reports were generally positive. They noted that there was plenty of desk space and quiet rooms.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Baltimore (Baltimore, Maryland)
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of this test center. We wish people who took the LSAT at the University of Baltimore would B-More forthcoming, but what can you do?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Maryland, Baltimore County (Baltimore, Maryland)
Notes: Taking the test at a large-ish, public university can be risky. Sometimes you’re put into a large auditorium with those small tabletops that fold up from the side of your uncomfortable seat, and sometimes you’re put into a smaller classroom with ample table space. Sometimes there’s commotion outside that seeps into the test room, and sometimes there’s no outside noise. The mixed reviews for the University of Maryland’s Baltimore County campus bear this uncertainty out. These reviews — much like Maryland’s crazy state flag — are all over the place. Some claim the testing conditions were fine, others claim they were not. Best to play it safe and avoid this one if you can.
Rating: :(
Lord Fairfax Community College (Middleton, Virginia)
Notes: The real Lord Fairfax was reportedly the first person to employ George Washington. Does this historical fact auger good employment-related fortunes to those who take the LSAT at the lord’s eponymous community college? Tough to say … there’s next to no information on this test center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
McDaniel College (Westminster, Maryland)
Notes: Reviews are a bit old at this point, but the general consensus from those who took the test here is that the chairs are uncomfortable and the desks are too small to fit both a test booklet and an answer sheet. This school’s athletic teams are nicknamed the Green Terror, but its test site should be nicknamed the Dream Tear-er, given its ability to frustrate test takers’ ambitions of attending law school.
Rating: :( :( :(
Harford Community College (Bel Air, Maryland)
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of Harford Community College, but its website did advertise its test center as “stress-free, positive, and supportive” … but of course “stress-free, positive, and supportive” are three adjectives no one has ever used to describe the LSAT, so they must referring to some other tests administered there.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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FLORIDA
MIAMI
Miami International University of Art & Design (Miami, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any information on this testing center yet …You could say that this info about MIU is MIA.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Miami Dade College – North Campus (Miami, Florida)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: It appears that whoever takes the test at a MDC location swears a blood-oath to never speak of it again. Because, like so many of the campuses at MDC, there are no reviews for the Wolfson test center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Miami Dade College – Medical Center Campus (Miami, Florida)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Like its North Campus counterpart, the reports on Miami Dade’s Medical Center are limited. Unlike its North Campus counterpart, the reports on the Medical Center are more positive. Large desks, efficient proctors, quiet rooms, and free parking give the Medical Center the winning edge in this Dade off.
Rating: :)
Miami Dade College – Hialeah Campus (Hialeah, Florida)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: A new testing center, and as such there’s not a ton of information. However, photos of the classroom online reveal new, if spartan, classrooms with long desks and plastic chairs. So you’ll have room to work, but they won’t be the most comfortable environs.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Miami Dade College – West Campus (Doral, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any information on this testing center yet. Not even a picture of a classroom. This center may or may not exist.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Talmudic College of Florida (Miami Beach, Florida)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: The Talmud is notoriously difficult to decipher and understand, so much so that the word “Talmudic” has become synonymous with “overly detailed.” It’s ironic, then, that we can’t find any details on Talmudic College of Florida as a testing center. However, if you’re willing to risk a possible dud of a testing center, this location is right on Miami Beach, which, as we all know, is bringing the heat.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Miami Dade College – North Campus (Miami, Florida)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Limited reports on Miami Dade’s North Campus, but it appears that test takers are put into a quiet room with efficient proctors and … small desks. Ah, small desks … the Achilles heel of so many otherwise good testing centers.
Rating: :(
St. Thomas University School of Law (Miami Gardens, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: St. Thomas is apparently the patron saint of well-run testing centers, because his namesake law school features everything you could want for the LSAT. Ample desk space, comfortable seating, good temp and lighting, low volume, and free parking.
Rating: :) :) :)
Miami Dade College – Homestead Campus (Homestead, Florida)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: There aren’t any online reports of this testing center that we could find. However, it’s a smaller campus that looks easily navigable.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Florida Atlantic University – Davie Campus (Davie, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: You should approach this one with caution. The reports regarding the main Jupitor campus of FAU are wanting, so it’s reasonable to expect more of the same at the Davie campus.
Rating: :(
Broward College – Central Testing (Davie, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The good news: All reports show that this test center has comfortable chairs, ample desk space, and free and plentiful parking. The bad news: reports on the proctors are all over the place. Some people claim that the proctors were disorganized, miscalled the time, and allowed alarms to go off at random times. Others claim that the proctors were so chill that they let students keep working for a few moments after time was called. r the exam. That said, the rooms are small and quiet, and the desks are large. On balance, reports are positive, but you’re rolling the dice with proctors at this one.
Rating: :)
Broward College – North (Coconut Creek, Florida)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The most common complaint at this Coconut Creek testing center is that the proctors are a little crazy in the coconut. Test takers from multiple test administrations claim the proctors didn’t properly enforce the rules, or talked among themselves, or just took a really long time to administer the exam. That said, the rooms are small and quiet, and the desks are large.
Rating: :(
Florida Atlantic University (Boca Raton, FL)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: There’s not a lot of information about FAU’s main campus, but there are a few things to go off. Bad news first. The usual caveats for large public universities must apply: parking can be expensive, the campus can be sprawling, the path to your check-in point may be tough to follow, the rooms may be loud, and the desks may be small. Now, the good news. First, unlike most other public universities, FAU has a dedicated testing center that hopefully has gotten the hang of running good tests. Their online footprint suggests that you’ll be greeted by an anthropomorphic owl upon arrival, which is delightful.
Rating: :)
Barry University (Miami Shores, Florida)
Notes: Details are Barry scarce for this center, which is Barry frustrating, because usually year-round testing centers have tons of Barry informative reviews.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Florida International University (Miami, Florida)
Notes: FIU comes correct as an LSAT testing center. The rooms aren’t too crowded — you’ll have 3 or 4 feet of desk space to cook. The chairs are comfortable, the temperature will keep you cool, and the proctors keep things quiet and orderly. Parking comes with a small fee, but is easy to find.
Rating: :) :) :)
Florida Memorial University (Miami Gardens, Florida)
Notes: The small desks at Florida Memorial University had many test takers saying, “That FMU.” Aside from that, the reports are mostly positive, with quiet rooms, free parking, and good proctors. But your desk is your temple during the LSAT, so small desks are a no go for most.
Rating: :(
Nova Southeastern University (Fort Lauderdale, Florida)
Notes: We couldn’t find any information on Nova Southeastern, née “Nova.” But “Nova” literally translates to “don’t go,” so … maybe they’re trying to tell us something?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Florida Atlantic University at Jupiter (Fort Lauderdale, Florida)
Notes: This one’s on the outer rim of the 100-mile radius for Miami denizens. Besides the great distance from Miami, this test center is replete with bad reviews. Uncomfortable chairs, tiny desks, and a lack of a clock plagued many test takers.
Rating: :( :( :(
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GEORGIA
ATLANTA
Crowne Plaza (Atlanta, Georgia)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Not a lot of info on the Crowne Plaza in Atlanta, but if you’ve read any review of a hotel, you know the deal. If the hotel is quiet, it’ll usually be a decent enough test experience. But there’s always a risk that the venue will host some rowdy guests, disturbing your concentration.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Clark Atlanta University (Atlanta, Georgia)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Reviews of Clark Atlanta are decidedly mixed. Most claim you’ll have enough room to work, although some state that the desk didn’t provide enough space for both the test booklet and answer sheet. Multiple reviews from different test administrations mention unprofessional proctors and beeping in the hallway, so that seems like a recurrent issue. Probably best to stay away from this one.
Rating: :(¯
Clayton State University (Morrow, Georgia)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Based on the limited number of reviews, things seem like they run pretty smoothly at Clayton State. The rooms hold just around twenty or so test takers, the desks provide ample room to work, and the proctors are efficient. Some mention that parking is limited — it’s important to get there early. So, for a reliable Atlanta-adjacent test center, don’t delay, head out to Morrow.
Rating: :)
University of North Georgia – Cumming (Cumming, Georgia)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: We’ll pass right by any unfortunate and unprintable jokes about this location, we’ll just quickly note that there aren’t any reviews of this test center. However, this is a small satellite of UNG, which at least fits the bill of the quality test center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of North Georgia – Gainesville Campus (Oakwood, Georgia)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Not many reviews of UNG’s Gainesville campus, but the ones on hand indicate that this is a great test center. Apparently, the parking’s free and convenient, he desks provide plenty of space, the proctors are efficient and professional, and the noise is limited.
Rating: :)
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ILLINOIS
CHICAGO
Chicago LSAT Classroom Course
Loyola University – Chicago (Chicago, Illinois)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The 1984 census revealed that Los Angeles ended Chicago’s nearly 100 year run as the U.S.’s second most populous city, turning Chicago’s long-time moniker, “the Second City,” into a misnomer. LA’s wresting away of Chicago’s “Second City” status has had innumerable effects on the public’s perception of the Midwest and the coastal-heartland socio-political dichotomy in this county. One unremarked-upon effect, however, is how the Loyola school in Chicago is now a significantly less desirable testing location than the Loyola school in Los Angeles. Unlike the LA-based law school, Loyola University has small desks, which really make a difference on the LSAT. The rooms do tend to stay quiet, according to reports, but the parking will set you back somewhere between $5 and $15.
Rating: :(
John Marshall Law School (Chicago, Illinois)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: John Marshall’s most famous decisions as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court involved striking a balance between federal and state sovereignty. His law school, which serves as a year-round testing center, strikes a balance between good and bad features. You’ll have ample desk space, but you’ll be in a huge classroom with many other students. The room will usually be quiet inside, but there seems to be a lot of Illi-noise outside that sometimes seeps in. The proctors are good, but the price of parking is literally criminal ($20). Not a bad testing center, and you’ll probably be fine taking it here, but there are definitely drawbacks you should factor in.
Rating: :)
DePaul University (Chicago, Illinois)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: A nice temperate environment, with long tables to work at, and the room stays pretty quiet. Some reports say the proctors can be a little shaky, but overall, a quality testing center.
Rating: :)
Northwestern University (Evanston, Illinois)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: The size of the room will vary here, but most people report that the rooms feature large shared desks with one or more seat in between each test takers. That means you’ll probably have enough room to fit your test book and answer sheet on your desk. The lighting is bright, the temperature is good, and apparently the seats are very comfortable. The noise can vary a bit — as it is at larger universities — and parking is rough, unless you’re already at NWU. Not Northbestern, but not Nortworstern, either.
Rating: :)
Moraine Valley Community College (Palos Hills, Illinois)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Judging from the online photos of classrooms at Moraine Valley Community College, this testing center features the standard-issue long desks/plastic chairs/fluorescent lighting. It won’t be the most thrilling place, but it seems like you’ll have enough space for a test booklet, answer sheet, and watch.
Rating: :)
College of Lake County – Southlake Campus (Vernon Hills, Illinois)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: It sounds like this test centers puts two students to a desk, giving each just enough space to work. The rooms are smaller, with about 20 per room. However, there were complaints about power-tripping proctors that affected some students’ experiences.
Rating: :(
Indiana Wesleyan University (Merrillville, Indiana)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of Indiana Wesleyan University (no relation to the most well-known Wesleyan in Connecticut, as far as we can tell), but as a relatively small, private university, it’ll probably make a fine test center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Illinois at Chicago (Chicago, Illinois)
Notes: The main drawback of taking the exam at UIC is the size of the classrooms. They’ll be filled with 50 to 100 other anxious test takers. If you are highly sensitive to the nervous energy created by this many type A aspiring lawyers when taking the most important test of their lives, this might not be the testing location for you. Oh, and the rooms tend to be a little cold, but that shouldn’t bother your hearty, Chicago stock. That said, you will have quite a bit of space to work, and the proceedings tend to be quiet. Parking will cost between $5 and $15.
Rating: :(
Hyatt Regency McCormick Place (Chicago, Illinois)
Notes: Looks like this is new for 2018, given the dearth of online accounts for this. But be careful with hotels, since a quiet testing room is no guarantee in a place full of hustle and bustle. Parking can also be astronomically expensive.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Kenwood Academy (Chicago, Illinois)
Notes: Kenwood Academy sounds like it produces nothing but cookie-cutter fancy boys who go on to become doctors and bankers and GOP politicians. As a testing center, though, it’s not cookie-cutter at all. It seems like experiences vary quiet a bit. You can be in a large classroom, or a small classroom. You might get some noise, you might not. Fortunately, everyone seems to have just enough desk space to work and the parking is free. A qualified endorsement from us.
Rating: :)
College of DuPage (Glen Ellyn, Illinois)
Notes: DuPage is a huge community college, and should be approached with the same trepidation that one would approach a large public four-year institution. These institutions can be big, hard to navigate, and noisy. And it looks like many of the classroom feature tiny desks that won’t accommodate both a test booklet and answer sheet. Meaning you’ll have rearrange your whole test booklet set-up every time you turn to a new page at DuPage.
Rating: :(
Northern Illinois University (Dekalb, Illinois)
Notes: Research into Northern Illinois University turned up very little info — not to stereotype, but Midwesterners do seem to be the soft-spoken types — and what was there was fairly dated. Take this with a grain of salt, then: This seems to be a fine enough test center. Reports suggest there’s plenty of space to work, and the rooms are kept dead quiet.
Rating: :)
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MASSACHUSETTS
BOSTON
Boston LSAT Classroom Course
Suffolk University Law School (Boston, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Suffolk will stuff folks — about 15 to 20 of them — into a large classroom. And that’ll give everyone more than enough space to work. The seats are allegedly comfortable and the testing center is reportedly quiet. Parking’s pretty expensive — $10 to $15 dollars — but is located in a lot at the school.
Rating: :)
Boston Convention and Exhibition/Hynes Convention Center (Boston, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Sometimes LSAC will use a convention center, and these should be avoided at all costs. These convention centers usually handle a huge volume of test takers, and they typically put all the test takers into one room. Which means the process of checking in can take hours. It’s not uncommon for the actual LSAT to get started two hours after check-in time at these locations. And on the June 2019 at this particular convention center, LSAC apparently forgot there was another huge event being held at the same time of the exam, and had to relocate everyone to hotels a couple days before the test. Yikes.
Rating: :( :( :(
Boston University School of Law (Boston, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The reviews for BU School of Law are mostly positive. Apparently some rooms had small fold-out desks, but most gave test takers plenty of space to work.
Rating: :)
Northeastern University (Boston, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Northeastern puts around 50 test takers into large lecture halls, which gives the test takers just enough space for a test booklet and answer sheet. If you want space for 50 additional pencils, we suppose you’re out of luck. The seats are somewhat comfortable and things are mostly kept quiet. There’s been the occasional proctor complaint, but that’s to be expected at a testing center as busy as this one. Parking will cost $5-$10.
Rating: :)
Brandeis University (Waltham, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find anything on Brandeis University. Some would say its online … brand is … wanting.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Salem State University (Salem, Massachusetts)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Authority figures have chilled the hell out in Salem since the witch trials of yore. The proctors at Salem State are reportedly very lax, in a good way. They keep things orderly, but let you drink water throughout the exam. This, plus the ample space to work, makes this a desirable testing center, if you can make the trip up from Boston.
Rating: :) :) :)
Middlesex Community College (Bedford, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Very negative reports for Middlesex Community College. Sounds like the desks are too small, the rooms are too hot, and occasionally, the outside noise too loud and distracting. Also, kind of weird they made an entire community college based around that book Oprah told everyone to read in 2002.
Rating: :( :( :(
Bridgewater State University (Bridgewater, Massachusetts)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The small desks and consistently slow proctors were definitely not water under the bridge to the many test takers who took to the internet to complain about these things.
Rating: :( :( :(
Community College of Rhode Island (Warwick, Rhode Island)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The more recent reports suggest that this testing center features a lot of desk space and quiet rooms.
Rating: :)
Rhode Island College (Providence, Rhode Island)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Boston-area test takers willing to cross state lines will find a test center with quiet rooms, efficient proctors, free parking, and desks with just enough space to work. And lots of clams, presumably.
Rating: :)
Suffolk University (Boston, Massachusetts)
Notes: According to reports, the main campus’s testing center at Suffolk features slightly larger classrooms than the law school, with 25-50 students to a room on the main campus. But otherwise, the two testing centers are comparable. Plenty of space and a quiet working environment.
Rating: :)
Boston College Law School (Newton, Massachusetts)
Notes: The reports on BC are pretty dated, but unless the law school has done a full on renovation in the last few years, it sounds like you’ll be in a large classroom with plenty of workspace. Things are kept quiet, and the proctors are efficient and orderly.
Rating: :)
University of Massachusetts School of Law — Dartmouth (Dartmouth, Massachusetts)
Notes: Noted legal scholar Frank Black described UMass as an educational institution “in the sleepy West of the woody East,” which sounds like a lovely place to take the LSAT. But what of UMass’s law school, located near the southern shores of Massachusetts? We couldn’t find any information about this testing center, though law schools tend to be among the more reliable places to take the LSAT.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of New Hampshire (Durham, New Hampshire)
Notes: If you’re willing to journey into the Granite State — granted, it’s pretty far away from Boston — you’ll find a test center that past test takers highly recommend. Quiet rooms, orderly proctors, and plenty of workspace are among the features test takers praised. Parking is between $5 and $10.
Rating: :)
University of Rhode Island (Kingston, Rhode Island)
Notes: The reviews for this location are a bit dated — mostly from 2009. That said, nearly everyone complained about the tiny fold-out desks and uncomfortable chairs. Although most people commended the proctors for being reasonable with LSAC’s rules, such as not making people remove their hoodies — an actual prohibited article of clothing per LSAC’s test day rules. Who’s to say if the proctors would be similarly lax today? Literally everyone was wearing those heather grey American Apparel hoodies in 2009. And no right-minded proctor would kick out an entire roomful of test takers.
Rating: :(
Western New England College School of Law (Springfield, Massachusetts)
Notes: The name of this school is a mouthful — is its acronym WeNECSOL? Nonetheless, the people who have taken the test here have a mouthful of … praise … for it as a test location. The rooms are on the second floor, removed from the hustle and bustle of Springfield streets. The desks are large, the proctors are efficient, there are clocks on the wall to help you keep track of the time, and parking is free. Some reviewers noted that navigating to the test center can be a bit hectic, so taking a practice run to this test center is advisable.
Rating: :) :) :)
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MICHIGAN
DETROIT
University of Detroit Mercy Law School (Detroit, Michigan)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The LSAT, as we all know, shows no mercy, so this is a bit of an ironic venue for the exam. That said, based on the limited reviews, University of Detroit Mercy is a solid test center, with spacious rooms, large desks, comfortable chairs, and quiet environs. If only it could also impart the quality of mercy, like gentle rain from heaven, to those tortured souls who write this exam.
Rating: :)
Wayne State University (Detroit, Michigan)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Wayne State! Wayne State! LSAT Time! (Hope it’s) Excellent!
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Windsor Faculty of Law (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: You may end up taking the exam in a dusty old courtroom, but the proctors are apparently friendly (not to stereotype, but I mean … no duh, eh?), the noise is kept to down, and you’ll have plenty of space to work.
Rating: :)
University of Windsor (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We could only find one review of the main campus of University of Windsor, but it sounds like it was a very positive experience, with comfortable chair, plenty of desk space, and a digital clock prominently displayed on a wall. This reviewer also wanted to rate this test center as a “12” (out of … how many exactly?) but docked it “2 points … because Windsor’s a s—thole,” so we’ll let you assess their reliability as a source.
Rating: :)
St. Clair College (Windsor, Ontario, Canada)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: No info on St. Clair College. The eponymous Saint Clare of Assisi may have founded the aggressively ascetic Order of the Poor Ladies, which may make you worried about the campus amenities. But a glance at the campus’ online photos make the campus look modern and sophisticated, which suggests that this would be a perfectly comfortable place to take the test.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Ann Arbor Area Test Center (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: These “Area Test Centers” are sort of ad hoc sites LSAC will use from time to time. We don’t know what kind of test center this is … other than the fact that exists in some “Area.” As such, there aren’t any reviews for us to make a recommendation. So you’re rolling the dice with this one — and we wish you good fortune.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Oakland University (Rochester, Michigan)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: For the most part, Oakland University receives straight A’s from test takers. With respect to things people care about — desk space, proctors who know what they’re doing, comfortable testing environs, free parking — this test center hits for the cycle. However, some have noted that the test center has made finding the check-in location more difficult than it needs to be, on at least a few test administrations.
Rating: :) :) :)
University of Michigan �� Ann Arbor (Ann Arbor, Michigan)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: As far as large, public universities go, UM’s main campus is apparently one of the more reliable test centers. The rooms are quiet, the desks provide more than enough workspace, and the parking isn’t unreasonably expensive. Pretty much everyone notes that the test center is a little cold. It is this Californian’s understanding that all of Michigan is a frozen icescape, so that isn’t exactly surprising. But maybe bring a sweater.
Rating: :)
University of Toledo College of Law (Toledo, Ohio)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: At nearly every law school, you can expect long desks that provide suitable working space for the career-igniting test you’re about to take. Not so at Toledo College of Law, where the tiny fold-out desks in some (but apparently not all) rooms might lead to you exclaim a dejected, “Holy Toledo.” Other than that, this seems like a mostly fine test center (other than some reports of a frigid room), but the possibility of a small desk would make this a ToleDON’T for me.
Rating: :(
Thomas M. Cooley Law School (Lansing, Michigan)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Test takers have nothing but good things to say about the law school named after former Michigan Supreme Court Chief Justice and UM Law School dean Thomas M. Cooley — who, incidently, possessed of a prodigious beard. You’ll be put into a large auditorium with as many as 100 other test takers, but the rooms seem to stay quiet, you’ll have plenty of desk space for your scratch paper, and the proctors will keep thing moving. Allegedly, they’ve even provided breakfasts for test takers at some LSAT administrations.
Rating: :) :) :)
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NORTH CAROLINA
CHARLOTTE
Belmont Abbey College (Belmont North Carolina)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Abbeys are places devoted to monk-ish solititude and devotion, so it’s no suprise that Belmont Abbey is a consistently quiet and organized test center. But, also befitting abbeys’ cloistered and austere environments, Belmont Abbey is also reportedly a dimly lit and cold test center. So bring your thickest habit.
Rating: :)
Winston Salem Area Test Center (Winston Salem, North Carolina)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: These “Area Test Centers” are sort of ad hoc sites LSAC will use from time to time. We don’t know what kind of test center this is … other than the fact that exists in some “Area.” As such, there aren’t any reviews for us to make a recommendation. So you’re rolling the dice with this one — and we wish you good fortune.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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NEW YORK
BROOKLYN
City University of New York School of Law (Long Island City, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Mixed reviews at CUNY School of Law. Some say there’s comfortable chairs and plenty of desk space; others claim the test center is plagued by outside noise from foot traffic, nearby highways, and, occasionally, construction. You know what also receives mixed reviews from this aggregator: the fact that there are both CUNY schools and SUNY schools in this area. That’s confusing as hell, New York.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
LaGuardia Community College (Long Island City, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Ask someone about LaGuardia Airport, and they’ll let their feelings known. There’s a reason it’s considered to be the “most hated airport in America.” But we’ve been trying to find *anything* about the LaGuardia Community College test center, and there’s been nary a peep. I suppose that means it’s at the very least better than the airport. Plus, if you take the exam here, don’t worry — it’s not so close to the airport that we’d expect plane noise to be a huge issue.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Medgar Evers College (Brooklyn, New York)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: This is the Cadillac of testing centers. You’re given a private, full-sized desk, partitioned into a little cubicle. Think about that, you don’t even have to look at the dumb faces of the test takers next to you! The chairs are comfortable, you’ll hear nary a peep from another test taker, and proctors are courteous and professional.
Rating: :) :) :)
South Shore High School (Brooklyn, New York)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: One of the few high schools utilized as an LSAT testing center. And with good reason. You might be at one of those half desks you sat at in high school, which can barely fit the tablet and scratch paper. You might have flashbacks to high school. The reportedly distracting and discourteous proctors might remind you of your worst high school teacher. There will only be 20 students in the room, though, and the parking is easy.
Rating: :(
Touro College, Brooklyn Campus (Brooklyn, New York)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: Quick, guess what Touro College’s mascot is. You thought it was the Bulls, right? Me too. We’re both dead wrong. They don’t have a mascot. Anyway, the limited reviews suggest that even if people aren’t especially bull-ish on this test center, they at least had a fairly positive experience. Lots of deskspace, comfortable conditions, etc.
Rating: :)
Brooklyn College (Brooklyn, New York)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: Uhh, there’s a reason people have been calling this “Broke-lyn College.” Apparently you’ll be stuffed into a big lecture hall and given tiny little desks that can’t fit both a test book and an answer sheet. The room fluctuates between sweltering heat and hypothermic cold. They make you pay a king’s ransom for parking, between $15 and $20. And the proctors they recruit are disorganized and distracting.
Rating: :( :( :(
Wagner College (Staten Island, New York)
Offered in: September2019
Notes: A highly recommended test center, despite being Staten Island. So it must be good. You’ll be in a small room with no more than twenty test takers. Peace and quiet. You’ll have a huge desk to work on. Solid proctors. The option to party on a ferry afterwards. Plenty to recommend.
Rating: :) :) :)
Brookdale Community College (Lincroft, New Jersey)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Brookdale Community College is a short drive from Bruce Springsteen’s stomping grounds of Asbury Park, which is appropriate, because this test location will treat you like a Boss. It provides test takers with “huge desks” according to one test taker. There are multiple clocks posted on the walls to help you keep time better than even Max Weinberg. Parking is free, and proctors are orderly but not overbearing. You might say that those at Brookdale were … Born to Run an LSAT test center. Some reports suggest that the rooms can be a little cold, and others mention that Brookdale can be a little hard to navigate, so we recommend that you pack a sweater and take a practice trip to the test center.
Rating: :) :) :)
The College of New Jersey (Ewing Township, New Jersey)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: The online write-ups are pretty old, but all note that the desks are very small. You should probably try to avoid this one, which is a shame for Jersey-area test takers, because the name of this school clearly suggests that this is the only college in New Jersey.
Rating: :(
Touro Law Center – Long Island (Central Islip, New York)
Notes: The few reviews online for the Long Island branch of the Touro Law Center are positive. Clean, well-lit rooms. Efficient proctors. Plenty of desk space. Free parking. On the downside, the chairs are not the most comfortable, and there are a lot of students assigned to each room.
Rating: :)
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MANHATTAN
Manhattan LSAT Classroom Courses
NYC Seminar and Conference Center (New York, New York)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of this location, but the photos suggest that — although there are a lot of different rooms you could be placed in — you’ll probably have at least enough deskspace to work. The tricky thing about conference centers like this, however, is the long check-in process.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
New York Law School (New York, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Fewer than 50 test takers will be placed in a large lecture hall that seats more than 100, giving everyone plenty of space to stretch out and get to work. The seats are comfortable, the lighting is warm and inviting, and the rooms are sound proof. Even the restrooms are large enough to accommodate the test takers during the break. A++++ would do testing again.
Rating: :) :) :)
Pace University – New York City (New York, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Everyone says the desks are way too small and a lot of people say the proctors are distracting and erratic. The room is often too warm, except when it’s too cold. The chairs are uncomfortable. People are so upset about this Financial District testing center that they’re saying “Never again” in the reviews without even realizing how tone-deaf that is.
Rating: :( :( :(
Rutgers the State University – Newark (Newark, New Jersey)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Uniformly positive reports from the Newark, the city, campus of Rutgers, the State University. Most note the large desks, orderly process, and comfortable chairs.
Rating: :) :) :)
Hilton Newark Penn Station (Newark, New Jersey)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: There isn’t much online information on Hilton Newark Penn Station, but you should try to avoid hotels if possible. You never know if your hotel is going to also be hosting a particularly loud rowdy bunch of tourists or businesspeople, so a quiet testing environment isn’t guaranteed.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Seton Hall University (South Orange, New Jersey)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Seton is, ironically, not very good at seating its test takers. Everyone complains about the length of time it took for proctors to check in test takers, and the small fold-out desks that won’t accommodate both a answer sheet and test booklet.
Rating: :( :( :(
William Paterson University (Wayne, New Jersey)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: William Paterson may have signed off on the U.S. Constitution, but we cannot sign off on you taking the exam here. The desks are far too small, which sinks an otherwise solid test center.
Rating: :(
Elisabeth Haub School of Law at Pace University (White Plains, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: It might take awhile to get check in — you’d think this of all test locations could pick up the pace, amirite? — but all reports indicate that once in, you’ll have very comfortable test conditions.
Rating: :)
Eleanor Roosevelt High School (New York, New York)
Notes: This high school has small individual desks, which have just enough space to fit your test book and answer sheet. Proctors mostly keep the show running smoothly. You can expect all the normal janky-ness you remember from your high school though: incorrect clocks, small amount of outside noise, probably a chemistry lab with broken Bunsen somewhere.
Rating: :)
Rutgers – The State University (New Brunswick, New Jersey)
Notes: It may be “the” state university of New Jersey, but Rutgers probably isn’t “the” LSAT location you should choose in the Garden State. Enough reports mention small desks, overzealous proctors, and cold temperatures to merit a second thought about signing up here. On the plus side, it appears as though that fewer than 25 test takers are assigned to a room, the rooms are kept quiet, and parking is free.
Rating: :(
Bergen Community College (Paramus, New Jersey)
Notes: Complimentary parking, rooms with fewer than twenty other test takers, desks that are just large enough to fit both booklets, and quiet conditions. This is a new but quickly Bergen-ing test center.
Rating: :)
Montclair State University (Montclair, New Jersey)
Notes: Fairly positive marks for Montclair State. You’ll be in a large auditorium — here, take a look at what the classroom will look like — with around 50 other test takers. But you’ll have plenty of room to work on the long tables. We read that proctors can be pretty strict, so make sure you’re not breaking any rules. Recent reports are generally very positive, but some older reports mention proctors talking amongst themselves and messing up the section timing. And it can be a little tough to find the check in point, so a dry run to the test center is a good idea. Parking costs $8.
Rating: :)
SUNY – New Paltz (New Paltz, New York)
Notes: There are only a few older reviews for the New Paltz campus. Unlike many public institutions, this test location offers large tables, quiet environs, and free parking. The forecast for your test day conditions? SUNY.
Rating: :)
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QUEENS
St. John’s University (Jamaica, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: St. John wrote the Book of Revelations according to most theologians, but there’s at least one revelation his namesake school failed to make: people like big desks. Reports on St. John’s are positive across the board, except for the tiny, pull-out desks test takers are forced to use.
Rating: :(
Queens College (Flushing, New York)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: You’ll take this in a large auditorium, which means that it takes quit a bit of time to get everyone seated. But you’ll have a large desk to work on. The site is well-managed and clean, and the parking is pricy ($10-$15), but plentiful and onsite. Not fit for royalty, but it’ll do.
Rating: :)
C.W. Post – Long Island University (Brookville, New York)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Parking is free, the chairs are comfortable, the rooms stay quiet, and you have plenty of deskspace to work. There’s a horror story involving marching band practice outside the testing room, but that’s probably an anomaly for an otherwise sterling testing center.
Rating: :) :) :)
Hofstra University (Hempstead, New York)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Free parking, organized proctors, a ton of desk space to work, very little to complain about at Hofstra.
Rating: :) :) :)
Fairfield University (Fairfield, Connecticut)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: This university should, based on its name alone, provide a solid test center provide a level playing field and a fair opportunity to all. There’s very little info on it online, however, although it fits the bill for what is usually a solid test center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Bridgeport (Bridgeport, Connecticut)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: No info on University of Bridgeport online. As a smaller private univeristy, it’s probably perfectly fine as a test center. There probably won’t be any of the nagging issues at larger public universities that can lead to a low LSAT score and, ultimately, a law school rejection. Speaking of rejections, Bridgeport’s most famous alumni is the 7′ 7″ shot-blocking legend and Sudanese hero Manute Bol. May your score be in the same percentile as his height.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of New Haven (West Haven, Connecticut)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Must be tough to go a university in New Haven that *isn’t* Yale, especially when so many faux-modest Yalies will say they go to college “in Connecticut” to avoid bragging. We can understand why anyone who goes here would rather just avoid the subject. As a result, perhaps, there isn’t really any info as University of New Haven as test center. But maybe you can use its proximity to Yale to motivate you?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Yale University (New Haven, Connecticut)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Reviews at Yale seem to suggest that at less popular test dates — like June — it’s an amazing center befitting the consensus best law school in America. But at more popular test dates — like September and November, you can be crammed into a huge lecture hall with tiny desks.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, New York)
Notes: A lot of test takers claim Vassar’s test rooms are hot, stuffy, and way too bright. The desks are also way too small to fit both a test booklet and an answer sheet. And the proctors are occasionally distracting. So … yeah … don’t say “Yass, sir” to Vassar.
Rating: :( :( :(
Marist College (Poughkeepsie, New York)
Notes: There is only the barest of information on Marist College as a test center — and much of it is fairly old. The most recent reviews suggest that you’ll be given ample deskspace, comfortable chairs, and decent proctors.
Rating: :)
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OHIO
COLUMBUS
Ohio State University (Columbus, Ohio)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: *The* Ohio State University is one the largest universities by enrollment, land, majors offered, faculty, football-stadium-capacity … and yet, when it comes to desks on the LSAT, they go small. Basically every review of OSU mentions tiny desks, which are good for NPR concert series, but definitely not for the LSAT.
Rating: :( :( :(
Wright State University (Dayton, Ohio)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Reviews are uniformly positive for Wright State University. Large desks, free parking, comfortable environs, fastidiuous proctors, the fact that their arena is called, delightfully the “Nutter Center” — if you chose to test here you’d be making the, ahem, Wright choice.
Rating: :) :) :)
Ohio Northern University (Ada, Ohio)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: The reviews of ONU are pretty old, and decidedly mixed. But the Claude W. Pettit College of Law here was recently renovated, which hopefully means the rooms are comfortable and quiet, at least.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Ohio State University (Columbus, Ohio)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: *The* Ohio State University is one the largest universities by enrollment, land, majors offered, faculty, football-stadium-capacity … and yet, when it comes to desks on the LSAT, they go small. Basically every review of OSU mentions tiny desks, which are good for NPR concert series, but definitely not for the LSAT.
Rating: :( :( :(
University of Dayton (Dayton, Ohio)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Limited, but positive reviews, for Dayton. This one apparently features free parking, ample desk space, comfortable chairs, orderly proctors.
Rating: :)
University of Cincinnati (Cincinnati, Ohio)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: There are limited reviews at the University of Cincinnati, but they do suggest that it’s a well-run test center that provides enough desk space and efficient proctors. Also, Cincinnati’s mascot — the bearcat, which is neither bear nor cat — is the perfect nonsensical creature to embody what occasionally feels like a nonsensical exam.
Rating: :)
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OREGON
PORTLAND
Lewis & Clark Law School (Portland, Oregon)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: There’s not much info on Lewis & Clark Law School as a test center; the few reviews suggest that things run smoothly, and law schools are pretty safe bets. On a related note, before Lewis and Clark set foot on their westward voyage across America, Thomas Jefferson told them to watch out for mastodons on their trip. At that point, mastodons had been extinct for over 10,000 years. Still, we’d be remiss if we didn’t also tell you to watch out for mastodons at this test center.
Rating: :)
Lewis & Clark Law School (Portland, Oregon)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: There’s not much info on Lewis & Clark Law School as a test center; the few reviews suggest that things run smoothly, and law schools are pretty safe bets. On a related note, before Lewis and Clark set foot on their westward voyage across America, Thomas Jefferson told them to watch out for mastodons on their trip. At that point, mastodons had been extinct for over 10,000 years. Still, we’d be remiss if we didn’t also tell you to watch out for mastodons at this test center.
Rating: :)
Corban University (Salem, Oregon)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Corban seems pretty solid test center, based on reports. Maybe not quite as good as “blessing from God that is dedicated back to God” good, which is apparently what “Corban” means. But still, it has small, quiet rooms. The desk space is plentiful. The proctors enforce the important rules but are pretty chill about the over-the-top ones.
Rating: :) :) :)
Willamette University College of Law (Salem, Oregon)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: There isn’t a ton of info on Willamette as a test center, but they apparently send pre-laws on their mailing list meme-y good luck emails before the test. If they try haalf hard to make a good test center as they try to pander to the youths, this would be a promising testing site.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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PENNSYLVANIA
PHILADELPHIA
Drexel University (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: They may call them the Drexel Dragons, but fortunately the LSATs given here don’t drag on … reports indicate that the proctors are efficient and follow the rules. Drexel uses large auditoriums to fit between 22 and 50 test takers, so you’ll have plenty of room. Many indicate the room is a little dark, however. Drexel University is in the heart of Philly, so most test takers take advantage of the many public transportation options to get there, but parking seems to be, miraculously, free and easy to find, at least according to some reports. Overall, great reports, especially for a sizable university. The liberty bell may be nearby, but this testing center won’t make you crack under pressure.
Rating: :) :) :)
Temple University (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: November and September 2019
Notes: You’ll have to contend with all the typical issues that affect larger universities. It can be hard to find the location amidst the hustle and bustle of Philadelphia, making this test site the second most hidden Temple. You’ll eventually be placed in a sizable room with quite a few other test takers. You’ll have a tiny fold-up desk, so you won’t have enough space for both your test book and answer sheet. Your seat will be from the Mesozoic era, before we had the technology to make comfortable seats. Most test takers report that the rooms are quiet, but that’s no guarantee.
Rating: :(
Holy Family College (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The name of this university sounds like someone doing a last minute course correction before bleating out an explicative in front of a child. Holy fu … uh … amily? Anyway, this small college in northeastern Philly features small classrooms, desks that give you just enough space, rule-abiding proctors, and free parking.
Rating: :)
Cheyney Univeristy (Cheyney, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Like the former veep with whom this test center shares a similar name, the reviews here are quite old. Unlike the former veep, however, they’re fairly positive.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Penn State University – Lehigh Valley (Center Valley, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The reviews of the Lehigh Valley (oxymoron much?) campus of Penn State are pretty positive. You’ll be in a pretty large room — a veritable Nittany Lions den — but you’ll have quite a bit of space between you and the presumably fidgety pre-law student next to you. The desk space should be sufficient. Things should be kept pretty orderly and quiet.
Rating: :)
University of Delaware (Newark, Delaware)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: This one’s about 50 miles or an hour-long Amtrak train from Philadelphia. Reports vary on this location — but most indicate that the desks are small — barely large enough to fit just a test booklet. Some claim the chairs are super uncomfortable. And all indicate that parking is not free and a bit of a walk away from the check in location. Probably best not to roll the dice on this one.
Rating: :(
Richard Stockton College of New Jersey (Galloway, New Jersey)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Here’s an actual quote from colonial-era jurist and Declaration of Independence-signer Richard Stockton: “The public is generally unthankful, and I never will become a Servant of it, till I am convinced that by neglecting my own affairs I am doing more acceptable Service to God and Man.” Good to know that the college that shares his name honors the spirit of his DGAF attitude when it administers the LSAT. Although the reviews on record are quite old, they all state the chairs are torturous and the desks provide either just barely enough room or not enough room to work, depending on the room you’re placed in.
Rating: :(
Lehigh University (Bethlehem, Pennsylvania)
Notes: Not a lot of information to go off on Lehigh University (French for “The High University”). The few reviews out there are pretty positive. At the very least, the major boxes are checked: you’ll get a spacious desk and a quiet room. We can’t offer our Lehighest endorsement, but you’ll probably be fine here.
Rating: :)
Muhlenberg College (Allentown, Pennsylvania)
Notes: The information available online about Muhlenberg as an LSAT test center is limited. But if it is a convenient location for you, you shouldn’t have to mull over Muhlenberg for too long — the few reviews are quite positive. There’s free parking, located near the test room. The proctors are efficient. The rooms are quiet. And the desks are spacious.
Rating: :)
Franklin & Marshall College (Lancaster, Pennsylvania)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: The reviewers aren’t overly effusive, but it sounds like there’s a lot to recommend about Franklin & Marshall as a testing site. You’ll be placed in a lecture hall, but you’ll have enough desk space to work. The room will be kept quiet, befitting Franklin & Marshall’s residential location. It sounds like the proctors run a tight ship. All good news, and almost enough to excuse the fact that this college has the lamest mascot in the entire country (the Diplomats).
Rating: :)
University of Pennsylvania Law School (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Notes: UPenn’s law school gets rave reviews, with most reviewers noting the comfortable testing environment, spacious desks, and laid-back-in-a-good-way proctors.
Rating: :) :) :)
Rutgers the State University – Camden (Camden, New Jersey)
Notes: Like Washington crossing the Delaware to surprise Hessian forces in Jersey, some Philly test takers may consider making the trip across I-676 into Camden to attack the LSAT at Rutgers’s Camden campus. Reports are uniformly positive, with many noting the large desks, efficient proctors, and free parking.
Rating: :) :) :)
La Salle University (Philadelphia, Pennsylvania)
Notes: You’ll be in a small classroom with only a handful of other students, so noise won’t be a factor. However, you’ll have very little desk space in most of the testing rooms, and the room will be very cold. Parking is free, but about a 5 minute walk from the classroom. These drawbacks didn’t quite La Salle-y this testing center, but the reviews didn’t exactly La Salle me on this location either.
Rating: :(
Lafayette College (Easton, Pennsylvania)
Notes: We couldn’t find anything on Lafayette College. So here’s a piece of trivia on General Marie-Joseph Paul Yves Roch Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de Lafayette, for whom college was named: he helped create, along with George Washington, the American Foxhound breed of dog, which the American Kennel Club describes as a “good-natured, low-maintenance hound.” Perhaps the test center will be similarly chill?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Villanova University (Villanova, Pennsylvania)
Notes: Nova is literally Spanish for “Don’t go,” but reviews are mixed for this test location. Most agree you’ll be in a small room and that the proctors can be a little anal. Other than that … it seems like people have wildly different experiences depending on the test day. Roll the dice with this one only if you’re feeling lucky.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Mercer County Community College (West Windsor, New Jersey)
Notes: Although you’ll be taking the test in a large auditorium with as many as 100 other test takers, your testing experience will not be at the Mercer … excuse us … mercy, of the nervous energy created by that many anxious pre-J.D.s. Things are kept quiet and orderly, and you’ll be given plenty of desk space to work at. The test location is apparently a corporate center, not a classroom, so the chairs are the kind made for adults — read: comfortable, plush, given the ability to roll — and not the kind made for children — read: uncomfortable, plastic, immobile. The proctors are apparently super cool as well, with some reports mentioning that proctors would occasionally ask test takers if they wanted to move to a seat with better lighting.
Rating: :) :) :)
Delaware State University (Dover, Delaware)
Notes: This one reaches the outer edge of the 100-mile radius LSAC sets, so the trek alone would be reason enough to try to avoid this one for Philly-residents. But if you’re willing to make a short trip and stay overnight at the quaint capital of Delaware, you’ll at least wake up to a solid test center. Although the rooms are fairly large — and hold up to 75 test takers — proctors reportedly keep things moving in a quiet and orderly fashion. Test takers also have enough desk space to hold both the test booklet and answer sheet.
Rating: :)
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TEXAS
AUSTIN
Austin Community College (Austin, Texas)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: You’ll be at the Highland campus. Mixed reviews for this location. In all likelihood, you’ll be put in a large auditorium with somewhere between 25 and 75 other test takers. It seems like the size of your desk may change based on which room you’re assigned to. Some complained about small desks, but other claimed they had enough space to work. Rooms are generally quiet, and parking is free.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Huston – Tillotson University (Austin, Texas)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Small desks, noisy conditions, stuffy rooms, overly lax proctors. Reports of people actually eating during the exam. Avoid.
Rating: :( :( :(
Austin Area Test Center (Austin, Texas)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: These “Area Test Centers” are sort of ad hoc sites LSAC will use from time to time. We don’t know what kind of test center this is … other than the fact that exists in some “Area.” As such, there aren’t any reviews for us to make a recommendation on. So you’re rolling the dice with this one — and we wish you good fortune.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Courtyard by Marriott Austin Downtown (Austin, Texas)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Hotels are always risky propositions, because you never know who might be rolling through (in Austin’s case, probably tattooed artisanal queso-makers) and distracting you. So although we couldn’t find any reviews of the Courtyard by Marriott in Austin, that could be a concern. On the other hand, hotels almost always provide test takers with plenty of deskspace.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Texas State University (San Marcos, TX)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: There isn’t much info concerning LBJ’s alma matter’s test center mettle. But its motto is “The noblest search is the search for excellence,” which I guess means that my failure to find reviews attesting to the school’s excellence is just a sign that I am not the noblest of people.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Texas at Austin (Austin, Texas)
Notes: You will placed in a large — some will call it normal Texas-sized — room with 50 to 75 other test takers. But as far as large, public universities go, reports here are fairly positive. You’ll have comfortable chairs and plenty of desk space. Things are kept quiet. Parking will cost you though, if you have to drive.
Rating: :)
Southwestern University (Georgetown, Texas)
Notes: There aren’t many reports on this location, but the ones we did find were uniformly positive. Quiet, plenty of desk space, comfortable, efficient proctors, free parking. Might be worth the drive from Austin.
Rating: :) :) :)
University of Texas at San Antonio (San Antonio, Texas)
Notes: This one’s within 100 miles from Austin, so you may end up here if you’re placed on the waitlist. Reviews are uniformly positive here, however. You’ll be in a comfortable chair and have more than enough workspace on your desk. The lighting and temperature of the room will be on point. It’ll be quiet. These may not be enough to (ahem) spur you to make the 80-mile drive from Austin, but if you end up here, it’ll at least be a good test center.
Rating: :) :) :)
University of Incarnate Word (San Antonio, Texas)
Notes: Another good testing center in San Antonio. The (incarnate) word on this one is very comfortable chairs, very quiet testing conditions, ample desk space. Oh and free parking.
Rating: :) :) :)
Saint Mary’s University (San Antonio, Texas)
Notes: Yet another great test center from reliably Lovable San Antonio Texas. Everyone says this is a good place to take the exam, with more than enough space to work, very comfortable chairs, and very quiet surroundings.
Rating: :) :) :)
Our Lady of the Lake University (San Antonio, Texas)
Notes: We haven’t heard anything, from the lake lady or anyone else, about this location.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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DALLAS
Bill J. Priest Institute for Economic Development (Dallas, TX)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: The facilities at this one are apparently fine, but there are more complaints about bad proctors from this test center than there are from any other test center we’ve read about. And you should know, based on the scope of this post, we’ve read about a *lot* of test centers. Proctors showing up late, proctors allowing devices to beep throughout the test, proctors keeping inaccurate time — you name it, we’ve heard it about Bill J. Priest.
Rating: :( :( :(
Southern Methodist University (Dallas, TX)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Reviews are generally positive at Southern Methodist University, with test takers praising the quiet environs and desk space.
Rating: :)
University of North Texas at Dallas (Dallas, TX)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of this test center, despite it handling a lot of LSAT administrations. Ask them about the Cowboys or barbecue or property rights or whatever and Texans can’t say enough; ask them about a LSAT test center and all the suddent they’re the shy types.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
University of Dallas (Dallas, TX)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The limited reviews of the University of Dallas are extremely effusive, noting the limited number of students, the professional proctors, the large table to work at, and the super quiet conditions.
Rating: :)
University of Texas – Arlington (Arlington, TX)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: The reviews of UT’s Arlington campus are quite positive. You’ll have more than enough space to work, the conditions are quiet and comfortable, and you should get checked in quickly enough. There was apparently once a huge fiasco with proctors once incorrectly enforcing the watch rules LSAC has in place … but this school’s mascot is a Maverick, so a little bit of rule-bending is to be expected.
Rating: :)
Collin Higher Education Center at Collin College (McKinney, TX)
Offered in: September, October, and, November 2019
Notes: Saying everything is bigger in Texas is a horrible cliche, but apparently the desks at Collin Higher Education Center at Collin College really *are* bigger, with test takers noting that you’ll receive over 6 feet of space to spread out and work. You know what else is bigger in Texas? This dude Collin’s ego. Who puts their name in a college twice?
Rating: :)
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HOUSTON
South Texas College of Law (Houston, Texas)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Pretty standard law school testing center. You’ll have a good amount of desk space and the facilities will be quiet. It seems like the room size varies quite a bit at this location; reports indicate you could be put in a small room with fewer than 25 other test takers, or you could be put into a huge auditorium with almost 100. Parking is easy to find, but will cost you $5-$10.
Rating: :)
Texas Southern University (Houston, Texas)
Offered in: October and November 2019
Notes: You could do worse than TSU. You’ll be in an auditorium with 20-50 other test takers, but you’ll be using at a large shared desk with enough room to work. The chairs are the attached-to-the-desk type that can squeak a bit, but the room is otherwise kept quiet. There will be good proctors and free and easy parking.
Rating: :)
University of Houston (Houston, Texas)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: There are several testing centers at the University of Houston. This is the mainlocation (Test Center Code 12561, f.k.a. University of Houston – University Park). You should know this, because you probably want to avoid this particular location. A Hous-ton of complaints about this center: big auditorium, small desks, cramped quarters, stuffy rooms, overly lax proctors, long waits for the restroom.
Rating: :( :( :(
University of Houston – Downtown (Houston, Texas)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: Reviews are more mixed to negative at the downtown location of the University of Houston. Most of the complaints focus on the small wooden desks — which won’t give you enough space to lay your test booklet and answer sheet side-by-side — and the uncomfortable seats. On the other hand, the rooms are small and will be kept quiet.
Rating: :(
University of Houston – Clear Lake (Houston, Texas)
Offered in: November 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of the Clear Lake location of the University of Houston. But its proximity to the Houston Space Center could lead one to deduce that it is out of this world.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Texas A&M – Galveston (Galveston, Texas)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: We couldn’t find any reviews of Texas A&M Galveston, but it is on an island; as such, it provides opportunity for some beach-based revelry immediately after the exam is over, which few test locations can boast.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Prairie View A & M University (Prairie View, Texas)
Offered in: October 2019
Notes: You won’t be in a little house at Prairie View, you’ll be in a huge auditorium with nearly 100 other test takers. You’ll have large shared desks to work at least. The rooms are reportedly colder than Bun B’s verse on UGK’s legendary South Texas slapper “Murder.”
Rating: :)
Sam Houston State University (Hunstville, Texas)
Notes: A February-only location, which is pretty rare. Maybe because of that, we couldn’t find many reviews online. The real Sam Houston spoke out against the federal government’s fraudulent dealings with the Cherokee and opposed secession, so history judges him kindly on those counts. Maybe you’ll judge this test location kindly as well?
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Baylor University (Waco, Texas)
Notes: Positive, if a bit old, reviews for Baylor. Test takers were especially jazzed on the comfortable chairs and ample table space. The only downside is the distance from Houston.
Rating: :)
Lamar University (Beaumont, Texas)
Notes: As far as we can tell, there’s no information on Lamar University as a test location, so let’s make up some for you: The educational mission of the school is to honor famous Lamars: be they Odoms, Jacksons, Millers or comma Kendricks. Heck, even Lamarcus Aldridge and Jean-Baptiste Lamarck are feted. Consequently, before being allowed to cross the moat that separates the parking lot from the test center, you must complete a pop quiz on these notable Lamars. This not only adds an extra wrinkle of stress to your test day, but it’s also going to make it a bit more difficult to make the 8:30 am check in time. Plan accordingly.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Texas A&M University (College Station, Texas)
Notes: This is juuuuust on the outer-edge of the 100-mile radius for Houston-residents. So if you’re left on the waitlist and you get assigned here … that sucks. To agg insult to injury, you’ll have a tiny desk to work on, there will in all likelihood not be a visible clock, the parking will cost you, and you may have trouble finding the check-in site.
Rating: :( :( :(
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WASHINGTON
SEATTLE
Seattle University School of Law (Seattle, Washington)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Aside from one year in which they jammed everyone into a giant ballroom on the main campus, this is a pretty reliable testing center. Big tables to work at, quiet rooms, orderly and efficient proctors. As with any urban testing location, we recommend that you figure out parking before the day of the test.
Rating: :)
Renaissance Hotel – Seattle (Seattle, Washington)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Ask any Seattleite, and they’ll tell you Seattle is having a renaissance, and they’ll tell you it definitely is. Whether they view that renaissance positively or negatively probably depends on whether they have shares in Amazon. Ask any Seattleite about the Renaissance hotel specifically, and they go mum — there aren’t any reviews of this one. But — much like passing on 2 and goal with 25 seconds left on the clock in the Super Bowl — hotels can be a risky proposition.
Rating:
University of Washington School of Law (Seattle, Washington)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: Most of the reviews we could turn up on UW were of the main campus, not the law school. The main complaints for the main campus involved the size of the desks, and that’s typically not a concern at law schools, nearly all of which provide ample desk space.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Shoreline Community College (Shoreline, Washington)
Offered in: September, October, and November 2019
Notes: There aren’t any reviews we could find of this testing center, but photos of the classrooms make it look like your prototypical community college classroom: long desks with two plastic chairs to a table, fluorescent lighting, drab carpet, etc. In all likelihood, this is an adequate testing center.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
Everett Community College (Everett, Washington)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: If the testing centers could get an LSAT score, Everett Community College would score in the 170s, easily. The desks have more than enough space, and there are even accommodations for the left-handed folks. The rooms are quiet, the chairs are comfy, the lighting is on point, and the temperature is regulated with precision (not that a little cold would bother a Washingtonian).
Rating: :) :) :)
Western Washington University (Bellingham, Washington)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The few reviews on Western Washington U are quite positive. Sounds like you’ll be in the test room with only a few others, so things are kept to a hush. You’ll have plenty of space to work. Parking is metered, but close to the check in point. And the proctors are efficient and friendly.
Rating: :) :) :)
Central Washington University (Ellensburg, Washington)
Offered in: September 2019
Notes: The rooms are on the larger side — about 70 students per room — but the proctors manage to keep them quiet and secure, according to reports.
Rating: :)
Gonzaga University (Spokane, Washington)
Offered in: September and November 2019
Notes: Scouting reports on Gonzaga are a little thin. If the testing center is anything like the school’s basketball team, it will start out promising, there will be a bunch of tall white people, and then it will make a critical mistake in the end.
Rating: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
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Blueprint’s Guide to LSAT Test Centers was originally published on Blueprint LSAT Blog
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phillyvoices-blog · 5 years
Text
The Whirlwind: In Conversation with Nico Meyering
“You don’t really have a choice about getting knocked down. You do have a choice between staying down or getting back up.”
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The view from this height is breathtaking.
I’m meeting my interviewee for lunch at the University Club, a top-floor members-only restaurant and lounge for students, faculty, and staff of the University of Pennsylvania. I’m a PhD student there, enjoying the Club’s “first year of membership free” perk. And my interviewee is enjoying the large tables.
“Sorry bro, I like to spread out.” Nico Meyering grins sheepishly at me, running a hand through his blonde hair, a nervous habit he will repeat often during our time together. On the table are a spreadsheet, a notepad with some hasty scribbles, a smartphone he uses like a computer, a half-forgotten graphic novel, and a sparse lunch of sweet potato soup, two turkey burgers, and mixed vegetables that he keeps meaning to eat. The phone lights up with some sort of reply and Nico speaks into it, recommending a sleep study and a “trach downsize before decannulation” before adding that he isn’t a medical professional. I admit that I don’t know what any of those words mean.
Nico isn’t a medical professional but he IS a whirlwind.
I met Nico years ago when we were both graduate students at Binghamton University. I thought his energy and constant movement was just the result of too much coffee or the stress of final exams. But here, dressed semi-formally, he’s the same whirlwind from before. The first thing I learn about Nico is that he’s always moving. I’ll learn much more over our hour together.
Nico was born 31 years ago with a nervous system disorder called congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS). The most notable and life-threatening symptom is the body’s lack of an automatic impulse to breathe, which means people with CCHS need lifelong mechanical ventilation when they sleep. Some need around the clock venting. Other CCHS concerns may include eye/vision issues, speech delays, or digestion issues.
After Nico was born, his mother swung into action, finding other CCHS families and bringing them together to share stories, support one another, and eventually connect doctors to families. A few decades later, those ragtag families are now The CCHS Family Network, Inc., a federally-recognized nonprofit that funds research and raises tens of thousands of dollars for the roughly 1200 people worldwide living with this condition.
Nico has been ever-present; he shows me photos from each successive gathering. He rattles off his various duties: moderating the group’s Facebook presence, being a liaison between people with CCHS and their families, explaining CCHS to general audiences (his TED talk from December 2017, Dis-ABLE-d, has been viewed on YouTube over 500 times), and trying to mentor teens and preteens with the condition.
“We are ninety-nine percent just as healthy or normal as people who don’t have CCHS. We have hobbies and interests and pet peeves and everything. I keep telling people: CCHS is manageable when you stay on top of it. It’s not fatal. It’s not degenerative. We have equal or better life expectancy. We get married, we have jobs, we get stuck in traffic, everything.”
The second thing I learn about Nico is that he jokes as much as he moves: constantly. It’s possibly his humor that has kept him going; while CCHS isn’t fatal, it also isn’t trivial. Nico rattles off over a dozen names of friends he has lost to illnesses made worse by CCHS or to tragic mistakes like falling asleep off their vents. “It’s up to us, you know, to keep their names alive. We gotta keep telling their stories.” He says determinedly. Behind that determination, however, is a measure of sorrow: Nico has lost many friends and he admits that it’s difficult to find new ones. But when he feels like I’m asking too many questions about the sadness, anxiety, and risk of living with rare diseases, he noticeably steers the conversation to a happier topic.
“You don’t really have a choice about getting knocked down. You do have a choice between staying down or getting back up.” He points out, making rare eye contact with me.
At 31, most Americans are building resumes or families. Nico is helping to build a movement. His vision of the CCHS community is larger and more comprehensive than the original group that met once every few years.
“I think something every group needs to constantly work on is inclusion and evolution. Our group is no different. That’s why we had a paper newsletter for so many years and now we’re online. It’s why we were English-language only for a long time and now we have some volunteers who can translate for us. We began by talking mostly about physical health and medical issues, now we include mental health and social issues. Young adults with CCHS were the first people to begin discussing the emotional burden of life with a rare disorder.”
I ask him what else the CCHS Network needs to do.
“We need to keep raising money because that money goes right to funding CCHS research. We’re rare and we’re a small group, so nobody’s gonna save us. We save ourselves. We share research and medical articles on CCHS, but we also need to start dealing with practical questions. I mean, a young couple who find out their baby has this disability aren’t interested in medical articles right away. They need to know about trach care, venting options, and how to talk about CCHS with other people. Chances are that they’ll have to educate doctors and nurses about it all.”
Nico’s in-your-face advocacy didn’t come naturally. He wasn’t outspoken about disability issues and disability rights when I first knew him. He is an introvert and his family is private by nature; Nico thinks it took significant time for them to accept Nico speaking candidly about his disability. And while Binghamton-Nico is different from Philadelphia-Nico, the seeds of change were always there: his early championing of LGBT and mental health issues years ago influenced how he advocates for people with CCHS today. “Whether it’s gay rights or disability rights or any other issue, this is true: if you don’t talk about it there won’t be any progress. You make your own momentum.”
Part of Nico’s value as a patient advocate comes from the bonds he’s formed in progressive communities. He marched alongside Occupy Wall Street, handing out water bottles and band-aids to other protestors. He volunteered with a soup kitchen and still keeps in touch with the guests he served. When a local school district cut sex ed classes, Nico volunteered with a LGBT community center to talk about contraceptives and consent. He protested so much at city council meetings that he eventually got thrown out of Binghamton’s City Hall for promoting services for homeless people, something he still gets visibly annoyed about. Seven years later, though, the people that share his posts and donate to his CCHS fundraisers are those same people he spent so long helping. In the week since our interview I found myself back in Binghamton to see family, and almost everyone I talked to, from the city’s former Mayor Ryan to guests at Nico’s former soup kitchen, remember his name and deeds.
Nico cracks a grin when I mention my Binghamton visit. “The biggest thing I learned there is that you eventually need friends, allies, people in your corner. You can do a lot on your own, but you do more in a team. If we can work together to write a grant or help someone in need, then that’s what we’re gonna do. Eventually the CCHS Network will have to work with biotech or pharma companies to develop a cure, so it’s good practice.”
I ask him about partnerships the Network has formed already and he demurs, but he does offer some thoughts on rare disease partnerships in general: “I was at the Global Genes conference [for rare disease research] back in June, and I can tell you that most research hospitals and biotech companies recognize the need to work with patient advocacy groups. We are no longer ignored. There are maybe some researchers who think they can whip up a cure without patient involvement, but they’ll learn really fast that they need our input because without it they will go bankrupt.” He rubs his goatee briefly, “The market is real Darwinian like that.”
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We pause so Nico can send an email to a CCHS family in Michigan. He signs off with an apology for replying so late. When I see his phone wallpaper it’s a woman with long black hair holding a long, black cat. He sees me looking and smiles. Nico is never short on words and each story is like a voyage.
He met Brittany online in April 2016. He noticed they were both AmeriCorps alumni and shared an interest in anime and Star Trek. At first he hesitated. He was unemployed and she mentioned wanting to eventually move to New York City. Nico was looking for a long-term relationship and she was only in the area to tend to an ill family member. But he took the time to send a few paragraphs and their first date was at a local Thai restaurant. The two now live together in Philadelphia, where she is a teacher and he is a financial administrator for a rare disease center. The couple got engaged in December and they share their apartment with three cats: Apollo, Hera, and Hermes.
“I dated some women for a year here and there, but we’d always break up whenever I finished school or moved states to take a new job. Brittany has really stuck with me.”
Nico claims to have been a nervous kid growing up, dealing with health concerns and wanting to fit in. Sometimes he’d descend into crying fits because he felt emotions too strongly, like a time when one or two misbehaving kids caused his entire class to miss recess.
“I think we get this message as kids, and this is especially true for boys I think, that emotions should be buried or that you handle difficult situations yourself. This is a bad message. It’s harmful. It took me a while to figure out that emotions and friends are strengths rather than weaknesses.”
I don’t see any trace of that nervous kid. Nico leans back in his chair, rubs his hand over stubble, peppers his sentences with “bro”, “dude”, and “man” regardless of gender, and fires off a quick message about different CCHS mutation types. To passerby, he is just a nerd reading a Spider-Man 2099 comic (he points out that it’s a different character than regular Spider-Man,) not one of the biggest names in a very small pond.
But why is he so busy? Why now? After living in a handful of different states and working tons of different jobs, Nico saw some patterns emerging for disabled youth. For one, he says, there’s a knowledge gap and a skills gap between the end of high school and becoming an established adult. The time you spend getting your health under control is time you can’t spend learning life skills. In fact, Nico reveals that he learned how to tie a tie and how to shave by watching YouTube videos.
“When I was on the job market, CCHS moms would always remind me ‘You need a job with good health insurance!’ They wouldn’t stop reminding me. I think they may believe it is easier to get a full-time job with benefits than it really is. Even if you have the schooling and the skills, it’s difficult. Even when you have insurance, it’s tough to understand it.”
So Nico made a checklist to help young adults and their families prepare for independent living. “It’s a conversation families need to have together. It’s not you versus your kid. It’s your whole family versus the problem.”
Other projects followed: a guide to seeking employment while disabled, a guide to CCHS care in schools, one-page factsheets about CCHS for families to give to doctors and nurses, a slew of public speaking appearances, mostly at comic conventions (his talk on disability representation in anime was rated the best panel at GeneriCon 2019, and he repeated the talk at Wizard World Philadelphia this summer.)
He talks animatedly about another idea: setting up a small fund to buy pulse oximeters and other vitals monitoring equipment.  “Our bodies send signals that our brains don’t always catch, so we could be ill and not know it. If you have a machine that tells you your oxygen levels are low, that could be the difference between resting at home or exerting yourself and ending up hospitalized or worse. I haven’t fleshed this concept out yet though.”
He also wants to help people with CCHS explain the condition to others. “Stigma kills people and knowledge kills stigma. Our disability is nobody’s fault. It’s not contagious. We haven’t done anything wrong. It’s just the way it goes, dude.”
And he talks about money. Since being elected to the Board in 2015, Nico has worked hard to lead collaboratively and to consult others before taking action. It’s what led to his popular Dungeons and Dragons charity games, which raised several hundred dollars at the last CCHS conference. It’s what led to his “Faces of CCHS” project last November, which was shared on Facebook over one hundred times. His last fundraiser brought in several hundred more dollars.
“We need to make a difference AND get attention at the same time. Good cash flow lets charities steer their own ship; even $10 from a few people helps us go to rich people and say ‘Look, we have all these people participating. They believe in our cause. Will you believe too?”’ and then send them some cute baby photos. That’s a good pitch.” He smiles.
It’s clear Nico loves talking about CCHS and his work in disability issues, but getting to know the man behind the work is frustratingly difficult. I ask him about his hobbies like video games and hiking, but he says it’s difficult for him to find the time for those hobbies: “Sometimes I wish I could finally finish a game, but I don’t go ten minutes without needing to do something or reply to someone.” His lack of free time doesn’t seem to bother him. “Anyone can turn on a PS4. Anyone can read a good book. But not everyone can help a CCHS person or family in need. The work is the important thing here.”
Looking to the future, all Nico sees is hope, the word he has tattooed on his left arm. He plans on seeing a CCHS cure in his lifetime, he tells me. Until then, he’ll keep on making the CCHS journey easier for everyone.
“I think some parents are frightened when they realize their children are growing up in a very different world. And I think CCHS kids are scared by the responsibilities that come with being an independent CCHS adult. It’s less scary when you listen to each other and work together.”
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alexatrevino93 · 4 years
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