June 2008 LSAT Administration
The June LSAT had a total of 101 scored questions—23 in Games, 25 in one Arguments section, 26 in the other Arguments section, and 27 in Reading Comprehension. Reports from June 2008 test takers indicate that the experimental section appeared in Section 1 or Section 3 on most test forms.
Below is the breakdown of how students rated individual sections in relation to the tests in the Diagnostic Exams book. Many students found the Games section to be easier than those on recent tests, and many students found the Reading Comprehension section to be more difficult than those on other recent tests. Students found the Arguments sections to be of about the same difficulty level as those on recent tests. Overall, students who stuck to their pacing plans felt prepared and confident.
| Section Type | Much easier | Easier | About the same | Harder | Much harder |
| Games | 5% | 24% | 48% | 16% | 6% |
| Arguments | 1% | 10% | 73% | 12% | 3% |
| Reading Comprehension | 1% | 12% | 49% | 29% | 9% |
Scored Games - 23 questions
The Games section included one In-Out game, one group game, one linear order game, and one vertical order game. As usual, determining the best way to represent the diagrams made the games manageable.
Scored Arguments - 25 and 26 questions
There were no unusual variations in question types in the scored sections. Identifiable recurring flaws appeared frequently in both sections. Many of the Inference questions dealt with quantity statements or conditional logic. All in all, there was very little surprising in these sections.
Scored Reading Comprehension - 27 questions
The first passage talked about the difficulty of enforcing internet laws over international borders, the second consisted of comparative reading passages about the types of lubricants used in oil drilling, the third passage discussed a dance called The Cakewalk, and the fourth passage discussed how cohesive groups can have both positive and negative results.