Visual Data Navigator

You are visualizing change in 75th Percentile LSAT for ABA-approved law schools in Louisiana

We put all schools in Louisiana on one chart, and then show the change in the 75th percentile LSAT for each school's entering class between 2010 and 2014. The purple marker shows the 75th percentile LSAT score in 2010. This chart demonstrates that not all changes in LSAT score are the same. Explain More About This Chart

Created with Highcharts 4.1.8LSAT ScoreLouisiana (4 schools)LSAT 75th Percentile Change on Nationwide LSAT Score Distribution1200 %ile1250.7 %ile1302 %ile1355.6 %ile14013.4 %ile14526.1 %ile15044.3 %ile15563.9 %ile16080.4 %ile16592 %ile17097.4 %ile17599.4 %ile18099.9 %ileLST | Law School Transparency

Group-Component Charts Explained

Risk BandLSAT
ScorePercentile
Minimal Risk156-180≥ 67.4
Low Risk153-15555.6 - 63.9
Modest Risk150-15244.3 - 52.5
High Risk147-14933 - 40.3
Very High Risk145-14626.1 - 29.5
Extreme Risk120-144≤ 22.9

These charts (one chart for each group) have three parts:

1. LSAT Distribution: The shaded blue area shows the distribution of LSAT scores for all people who took the LSAT during the last three years. LSAT scores range from 120 to 180. A student scoring 120 is in the 0 percentile because the student scored better than 0% of test-takers. A student scoring a 180 is in the 99.9 percentile because the student scored better than 99.9% of test-takers. A student scoring a 160 is in the 80.4 percentile because the student scored better than 80.4% of test-takers. You can hover over the blue outline to see a tooltip for all each LSAT/percentile combinations.

2. Black and Green Bars: Each school has a bar. The start point for each bar, a purple marker, is the school's 75th percentile LSAT score for students who entered in 2010. The end point is the 75th percentile LSAT score for students who entered in 2014. If the 75th percentile went up, the bar is green. If it went down, the bar is black. If the score is the same, there is only a purple marker (no bar). You can hover over the bar (or marker) to see the school and how its 75th percentile LSAT score has changed.

3. Risk Overlays: We highlight the three highest risk areas, from high to extreme. Using these indicators, you can see which schools' bottom three-quarters students are most likely to struggle on the bar exam.

Current Risk Level

This table shows the total number of schools at each Risk Level, which is based on students who entered in 2014, in Louisiana.

Risk Level by 75th Percentile LSAT Scores, 2014 Entering Class
Extreme Risk Very High Risk High Risk Serious Risk Other Schools Modest Risk Low Risk Minimal Risk
LA 0 0 1 1 3 0 0 3

Read this chart across each row. For example, the 4 schools in the LA group, 1 schools are "Serious Risk" and 3 schools are not (based on students who entered in 2014).

Average percentile decline for bottom three-quarters by group

Because LSAT scores follow a roughly normal distribution, it's difficult to compare raw score changes. On the following table, we show decline by percentile to illustrate how some declines were steeper than they first appear. The charts on the "Group-Component Charts" tab show how the meaning of the drop also depends on where a school started when assessing school admissions decisions.

Average Decline
Between 2010 and 2014
LSAT - 75th
2010
LSAT - 75th
2014
LSAT Change
Louisiana
4 schools
-2.8 percentile 157.3 156.3 -1 points

Read this chart across each row. For example, the 4 schools in the LA group had a decline of 2.8 percentile for the 75th Percentile LSAT from 2010 to 2014.

Aggregate Change Between 2010 and 2014 for 75th Percentile LSAT

The top half of both charts — in purple — shows how law schools in Louisiana are concentrated within a risk category based on students who entered in 2010. The bottom half of both charts — in black — reflect today, the students who entered in 2014.

 

Created with Highcharts 4.1.820102014# of SchoolsMinimal RiskLow RiskModest RiskHigh RiskVery High RiskExtreme Risk432101234LST | Law School Transparency
Created with Highcharts 4.1.820102014# of SchoolsOther SchoolsSerious Risk432101234LST | Law School Transparency

 

Hover over a risk category (x-axis) to see the full breakdown. Looking at the first chart, for example, hover over the "High Risk" column. In 2010 there were 1 schools that qualified as "High Risk" based on 75th Percentile LSAT. However, in 2014 there are 1 schools that qualify as "High Risk."

Note the schools that reduced class size to keep admissions credentials steady, as well as the schools that drastically (and dangerously) cut standards in order to ensure enrollment did not drop so far that the school could not operate.