The American Bar Association (ABA) has granted five additional law schools permission to use the JD-Next alternative admissions program, allowing applicants to bypass the traditional Law School Admission Test (LSAT) or GRE. This development, announced in June 2024, brings the total number of law schools accepting JD-Next to 57. More than a quarter of the 197 law schools accredited by the ABA now embrace this alternative admissions route. The growing popularity of JD-Next signifies a shift in law school admissions criteria, providing students with more flexible options.
More than a quarter of the 197 law schools accredited by the American Bar Association now accept JD-Next, after the ABA granted five more law schools permission to use the alternative admissions program. Subscribe to The Daily Docket: https://t.co/s1z0JFig0G https://t.co/17HOnsKeV5
57 Law Schools Now Accept JD-Next For Admission In Lieu Of LSAT Or GRE https://t.co/ieXgEaOvFM https://t.co/xpksseBJkB
The American Bar Association has granted five law schools permission to use the alternative admissions program JD-Next, pushing the number of campuses that allow applicants to bypass the Law School Admission Test or GRE to 57 @Karen_Sloan1 https://t.co/pqljg85Ekk https://t.co/9dwAvvQZBz
LSAT alternative gains popularity as more law schools sign on https://t.co/xsVOnusvHS https://t.co/fXHvrYxM1V
The 2024 ATL Top 50 Law School Rankings Are Here! https://t.co/tuHQBz3BIj