Practice is the key to success in the LNAT.
Whilst there are many ways to improve your question answering, you cannot be fully prepared until you have worked through authentic questions under the simulated environment of the real test.
That's why UniAdmissions produced these mock papers, spanning 100 pages, and including 90 questions. Working through these 2 practice tests under exam conditions will build your familiarity with the test format. Using the fully worked solutions you can fine-tune your performance before test day arrives to ensure you perform to the best of your ability.Published by the UK's leading University Admissions Company, this fully up-to-date resource contains all the latest question styles in the test, as written by our specialist test tutors. Practicing with these papers will allow you to rapidly improve your test scores and approach the real exam with confidence and gain the score you deserve.
LNAT Practice Papers Volume 1 : 2 Full Mock Papers, 100 Questions in the style of the LNAT, Detailed Worked Solutions, Law National Aptitude Test, UniAdmissions
Description
Author Description
Aiden graduated from Peterhouse, Cambridge, with a First Class Honours Law degree and has tutored Oxbridge law applicants at UniAdmissions for two years. Aiden scored in the top 10% nationally in the LNAT and is now a trainee solicitor at a top US firm in London. He has a keen interest in helping out students with application advice as he believes that students should get all the help they need in order to succeed in their applications. In his spare time, he likes to travel and run outdoors.
Rohan is Director of Operations at UniAdmissions and is responsible for its technical and commercial arms. He graduated from Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, and works as a doctor. Over the last five years, he has tutored hundreds of successful Oxbridge and Medical applicants. He has authored fifty books on admissions tests and interviews.
He has taught physiology to undergraduates and interviewed medical school applicants for Cambridge. He has also published research on bone physiology and writes education articles for the Independent and Huffington Post. In his spare time, Rohan enjoys playing the piano and table tennis.