New Delhi, 15th December, 2016 – The School of Law (SOL) of SVKM’s NarseeMonjee Institute of Management Studies (NMIMS) has partnered with global computer-based testing leader Pearson VUE for the reasoning based law admission test LSAT—India 2017.
NMIMS School of Law will consider LSAT—India™ 2017 scores as an admissions criteria for law aspirants. The test will be conducted on April 23, 2017 (Sunday) in multiple cities across India.
Divyalok Sharma, senior director of client development at Pearson VUE India, said: “Our partnership with NMIMS School of Law is a testimony of the popularity of LSAT—India™. We strongly believe in assessing the critical thinking and reasoning skills of law aspirants in the country and this is completely in sync with the focus of NMIMS School of Law’s law programme. This partnership will enable more law aspirants to get quality law education as NMIMS School of Law brings a lot of credibility in the legal domain.”
The LSAT—India™, offered by the global Law School Admission Council (LSAC), USA (LSAC.org), in conjunction with Pearson VUE, assesses the critical reading and verbal reasoning skills that are needed to succeed in law school.
About Pearson VUE
Pearson VUE (www.pearsonvue.com) is the global leader in computer-based testing for high-stakes certification and licensure exams in the healthcare, finance, information technology, academic and admissions markets. We offer a full suite of services to develop, manage, deliver and grow test programmes for over 450 clients via the world’s most comprehensive network of highly secure test centres in 180 countries, and through online solutions. Pearson VUE owns Certiport, the global leader in foundational IT certification solutions, and is a business of the world’s leading learning company Pearson (NYSE: PSO; LSE: PSON).
About LSAT—India™
LSAT—India™ is a standardised test adopted as an admissions criterion by multiple law colleges across India. It measures skills that are considered essential for success in law school. LSAT—India™ is specially created for admissions to law schools in India by the Law School Admission Council, USA (LSAC). The LSAC has been helping law schools in various countries evaluate the critical thinking skills of their applicants for more than 65 years.