Due to the pandemic, students could take the LSAT online from any location, so long as they followed certain security protocols. But the unreliable Brownsville internet meant her apartment was out of the question.
The local library only had two private rooms, which couldn’t be reserved, and had a two-hour limit. The test is three hours long. A local test center told her to try another in Edinburgh an hour away — she drove there, only to find it couldn’t offer the LSAT either.
She called the Brownsville school district, but got shunted between departments before finally giving up.
She called the city council, but got a busy signal; She even emailed billionaire Elon Musk’s company SpaceX, asking if
the region’s largest private employer might have a space for her to take the test, but never got a response.
Eventually, Rosario called a former professor at Community College of Philadelphia, who called Brownsville law firms vouching for her until one of them let her take the test in an empty office.
After spending years of savings to take the LSAT, Rosario finally got back her score. 132: two points less than the practice test she took before she started this process all those months before.
If there are disproportionate barriers to getting into law for rural students of color like Rosario, that affects the types of lawyers we get — as barriers in medicine, education, and other fields will affect the professionals we get in those spaces too.
“The funny part is, I don’t want to go to law school to get rich. I want to do public service, to help asylum seekers and people in need, ” Rosario told me.
Rosario took a break the last few months, to work and build up her savings again.
On April 28, she is traveling to Temple University for a ceremony after being named to her alma mater’s 30 under 30 list.
And in May, she will enroll in a summer LSAT prep course and begin studying for the test again — this time, in Philadelphia.