I walked into Wescoe Hall (Formally Wescoe Parking Garage) at the University of Kansas, around eight in the morning. To make sure that I accurately describe my feelings about the LSAT (Law School Admissions Test) two separate reflective essays will be necessary. The current essay you are reading is my initial reaction to the LSAT and my observations about the test itself, more about the process of examination, than an analysis of the merits of the test. Your skills of observation have probably allowed you to infer that the next essay will be a reflective analysis of the merits of the LSAT. Walking into the test, I was a little concerned about the fingerprint requirement. After taking five separate sections of multiple-choice test, I looked down at all the little penciled in bubbles. It is hard to feel like you accomplished something when you spent your day making hundreds of little circles on one sheet of paper.
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