Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê improves Laws admissions process
3 February 2004
Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê is among the eight top law schools in England that have established a new admissions test for undergraduate law programmes.
The test has been introduced to provide additional information about a candidate's
potential for a career in law. It is not a replacement for A-levels, which will
be considered alongside the LNAT results for the selection process.
Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê will be introducing the test alongside the universities of Birmingham, Bristol,
Cambridge, Durham, East Anglia, Nottingham and Oxford. Once the test is established,
other law schools will be welcome to use it.
The LNAT intends to facilitate fairer grounds of selection, regardless of educational or personal background. It will identify the aptitude and skills necessary to succeed in a law programme, assess general intellect, comprehension, analysis skills, logic and judgement, and enable fairer selection among international applicants.
No prior study for the test will be necessary, and sample questions will be
made available for the two-hour examination.
Ïã¸ÛÁùºÏ²Ê's Professor Rodney Austin (Laws) is Sub-Dean and Faculty Tutor responsible
for undergraduate admissions. He said: "The test will enable law schools
to choose more objectively and rationally, and thus more fairly, between equally
well qualified candidates, of which there are many more than the places available.
It will also enable us to select candidates with more modest or unorthodox qualifications
but who nonetheless have the potential to read law, thus widening participation
in higher education and in legal education in particular. Because LNAT will
test candidates' intellectual aptitude rather than knowledge of a particular
subject, differences in educational, social and economic background should not
significantly affect the test results achieved by candidates."
To find out more about the Faculty of Laws, use the link below.
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