LSAT India 2017 Student Reaction
LSAT India was conducted across 22 test centres spread across 20 test cities in the country. LSAT India 2017 is a 2 hours 20 minutes paper which commenced at 10:30 am today, May 21, 2017. Comprising of a total of 92 questions, the test pattern of this law entrance exam was such that aspirants were given approximately 35 minutes to attempt questions in each of the four exam sections – Analytical Reasoning, First Logical Reasoning, Second Logical Reasoning and Reading Comprehension. There were 4-5 qustion paper sets in LSAT India exam.
There was no negative marking in LSAT exam and so aspirants were advised to attempt all the questions in this law entrance exam. A total of 77 colleges are accepting LSAT India 2017 scores to shortlist aspirants for admission in their law programmes.
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Shiksha is reporting live for LSAT India 2017 exam from Bharti Public School, Swasthya Vihar where 836 students are taking the exam. Most of the students we spoke to shared that LSAT India test paper was easy to moderate with respect to difficulty level and they were able to attempt all the questions in the exam paper on time.
LSAT India 2017: Test Pattern & Section-wise difficulty level
Siddharth Raj, DPS Indirapuram: “The exam was fine and I think there were four sets in the paper. All the sections were moderately difficult. In the first set of questions in Logical Reasoning, statement type questions were asked. The time was enough for each and every section. I completed the paper 5-10 minutes before the allotted time. In my test paper there were a total of 92 questions”.
Harshit Gupta: “It was fine. All the sections were moderate in terms of difficulty level”.
Vidushi, DPS Ghaziabad: “I did not prepare for this exam because I do not want to take admission in any of the colleges. The difficulty level of the exam was moderate. I was able to complete my exam on time. I have appeared for AILET and CLAT exam as well. I can say with full confidence that AILET was the toughest out of the three, then was CLAT and the easiest out of the three was LSAT”.
Sanjana, DPS Indirapuram: “The exam was bad. Questions were tough and they were not like the CLAT paper we have given. It was totally different. The paper was basically English and Logical Reasoning based”.
Niharika, Hopetown Girls School, Dehradun: “The exam was really nice, it was easy. According to me, out of all the sections, English was the most difficult and then the Logical Reasoning sections and then Analytical Reasoning section. Both the Logical Reasoning sections were easy, the difference between the two was that the first one contained more Analytical Reasoning questions and the other had more numerical based questions”.
Mishtha: “Reading Comprehension which was the last section was difficult. Logical Reasoning was easy but it was lengthy. I have given CLAT and AILET exam also, LSAT India exam was lengthy but it was not difficult compared to the other two law exams. There were approximately 100 questions in my paper”.
Poorvi Daori: “It went good except for the first section that was pretty time-consuming. Otherwise, the exam was ok. The difficulty level was normal just that the Reading Comprehension section was a bit complex”.
Rishab, Kendriya Vidyalaya: “I did not prepare for the exam and so it did not go well. I wasn’t even able to complete it on time”.
Rishab Chaudhary, Vidyagyan, Bulandshehar: “It was very good. The exam was not that difficult because there were no questions from General Knowledge. The paper only had Reading Comprehension and Logical Reasoning section. The Reading Comprehension section was time consuming. I have not seen the past years’ question papers for LSAT India, I just went through some sample questions which were shared on the official website of the law entrance exam. Pattern was exactly as they had said. The difference between both the Logical Reasoning sections was that in the second Logical Reasoning, they had given some situation based questions and we had to put them in order. There were 4 sections in the exam. We were asked 22-24 questions in each section and we had to attempt each section in 30 minutes time”.
Ashutosh Mishra, DPS Agra: “My exam was good. I got Set-E in the exam. No section was that difficult. For me, it was a moderate paper, not too easy and not too difficult. Analytical Reasoning was the easiest section. Both the Logical Reasoning sections were doable. English was a bit lengthy”.
Tushar Goel, Sanatan Dharam, Vidyamandir, Panipat: “It was fabulous. It wasn’t difficult at all, it was an easy paper. I was able to complete the paper on time. It started at 10:30 am and it was a 2 hours 20 minutes paper. The number of questions in the exam sections was not fixed. Around 23-24 questions were asked in each section. We were given 35 minutes to solve each section. But the section doesn’t become inaccessible after the said time duration, it depends on the invigilator, if he catches you shuffling between sections then that can be a problem. Otherwise, it is not a problem. Logical Reasoning section was quite tricky. English wasn’t lengthy, it was easy. Analytical Reasoning section was also easy. The entire paper was easy. Also, LSAT India exam was easier than CLAT. Test pattern was exactly as was shared, there were no surprises in this law entrance exam”.
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