
Diagnostic score high enough for a career change?
BLUF / TL;DR: In your opinion, What LSAT Diagnostic test score would be high enough to consider spending the effort to persue a career switch?
I don't know what my expectations should be for a score without studying for the LSAT. For context, when I was young my dad said I become a child advocacy lawyer, so it's always been a potential career option. However, it always seemed like an unobtainable goal. I have ADHD and a learning disability. I struggle with lengthy papers. None of my family members have a degree. I never thought I would complete college, let alone a postgraduate degree. That's why I never took my father's suggestion seriously and went into the IT field because "I was already good with computers." I, now, have 15 years of experience as an IT server administrator, a master's degree in cybersecurity, and a six-figure job. Now I'm questioning if my entire career is just the victim of the sunk cost fallacy. Since I have proven to myself that I can complete postgraduate coursework, I am wondering if I should switch careers. I feel that only if the law school work was intuitive for me would it be worth changing careers. My question is: In your opinion, What LSAT Diagnostic test score would be high enough to consider spending the effort to persue career switch?
I feel that my score isn't high enough. I had 160 in mind to at least consider it.
This test wasn't timed and fit it in between free moments in my busy schedule. I figured if I understood it, I could work on getting faster later. Also, the second half of section 3 and all of section 4 was done on a day I only had 5 hours on average sleep the previous two nights.