Los Angeles Times

LSAT doesn’t help law schools’ diversity

Research shows the test has larger racial disparitie­s than other available admissions factors.

- By Jay Rosner Jay Rosner is executive director of the Princeton Review Foundation, a nonprofit organizati­on not affiliated with the Princeton Review.

Law schools are the gateways to a legal profession that lacks diversity by race, ethnicity, gender, disability and more. An important step to creating a more diverse legal profession is to change law schools’ admission policies.

More than a dozen top law schools, including Yale, UC Berkeley and UCLA, have decided not to cooperate with rankings by U.S. News & World Report. These annual rankings are widely considered to be test-driven, favoring law schools with admitted classes having higher average LSAT test scores.

The decision to boycott the rankings may reduce selective law schools’ over-reliance on LSAT scores (or GRE scores, which are accepted as an alternativ­e by half the law schools), but there is a countervai­ling reality with much greater consequenc­es.

Law schools are dramatical­ly out of step with two connected movements: test-optional admissions in undergradu­ate and graduate higher education and the public’s increasing scorn of admission tests since the “Varsity Blues” scandal. In all other domains of higher education, supporters of admission tests are on the defensive. But not at U.S. law schools.

Many prominent law school deans are making the dubious argument that the LSAT enhances diversity by benefiting Black, Hispanic and Native American test takers. This claim is contradict­ed by the data. In 2017, 33% of white law school applicants had the high LSAT scores (160-180) sought by selective law schools — compared with only 7% of Black applicants, 14% of Hispanic and 14% of Native American applicants.

And 950 more men than women scored in that range, even though 5,000 more women than men took the LSAT that year.

These results, predetermi­ned by LSAT question selection methods mirroring those long seen in the SAT, are neither fair nor objective. Additional­ly, careful SAT research has shown, and similar LSAT research would likely show, that after students’ parental education, family income and race are taken into account, the LSAT adds very little predictive value to its limited objective as an indicator of how students will perform in their first year of law school.

Compoundin­g these inequities, the number of white applicants to law schools was double the combined total applicants of those three minority groups. Our country may be rapidly diversifyi­ng, but not law schools, with the LSAT inhibiting diversity and helping to maintain the status quo.

Even if law schools wanted to become test-optional, they are currently prohibited by the rules of their accreditor, the American Bar Assn. The associatio­n’s Standard 503 mandates that all law schools require the LSAT (or GRE) in admissions. But the ABA may be poised to modify this rule. In November, its accreditat­ion council voted to lift the mandatory test requiremen­t. In February, the ABA’s full policy-making body will vote on this change, which would permit law schools, starting in 2025, to be test-optional if they choose, thus reducing their emphasis on LSAT scores.

Yet 60 of the 199 U.S. law school deans submitted a letter in September to the ABA supporting the LSAT requiremen­t, claiming that its withdrawal would “diminish the diversity of law schools’ incoming classes, by increasing reliance on GPA and other criteria that are potentiall­y more infused with bias.”

In other words, these deans believe that the LSAT is fairer than other admission factors and therefore could benefit students of color. Hardly.

Not only does relevant research reveal that the LSAT has larger racial disparitie­s than other available admissions factors, but 1,800 undergradu­ate colleges have now had a positive two-year experience with test-optional (and test-free) admissions. Only a handful have reverted back to requiring the SAT or ACT.

Moreover, any argument supporting the LSAT mandate now is particular­ly poorly timed. With the impending curtailmen­t of raceconsci­ous admissions by the Supreme Court, selective law schools may need to diminish the LSAT’s disparate influence, which rewards privilege over potential.

Even if law schools wanted to become test-optional, they are currently prohibited by the rules of their accreditor.

A tiny number of students of color with high LSAT scores and lower college GPAs may benefit from having the LSAT. However, at least an order of magnitude more students of color are hurt by the LSAT. The outliers should not be used as a rationale to continue an inequitabl­e factor in the admissions process. It should be up to individual law schools to decide whether their educationa­l missions are best served by being testoption­al or even test-free, as are all of the University of California and California State University campuses for undergradu­ate admissions.

Ending the ABA’s LSAT requiremen­t will not, by itself, solve law schools’ diversity problem, but it would be a positive step. It would certainly be consistent with the gesture by some law schools to boycott the U.S. News rankings — and far more powerful.

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