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No LSAT? No problem.

Georgetown Law School is expanding its admissions procedures to accept candidates’ scores from the Graduate Record Examination, also known as the GRE, to recruit a more diverse class of students.

Up until this point, the school only accepted results from the Law School Admissions Test, which focuses on analytical reasoning, logical reasoning, and reading comprehension related to studying and practicing law. The GRE was created for general graduate students and assesses things like verbal, math, and writing skills.

Georgetown’s dean of admissions Andy Cornblatt announced in a release on Monday that candidates can submit scores from the LSAT, GRE, or both exams for the fall of 2018.

“While the LSAT remains an important admissions tool, we also believe that it is well past time that the legal profession open wide the doors to an even more diverse population that better reflects American society as a whole,” Cornblatt said. “We think that allowing the use of the GRE will help us to accomplish that goal.”

The field of law is becoming “increasingly interdisciplinary,” said Georgetown Law dean William Treanor in the release. “So welcoming students with a broad and varied set of interests is central to preparing our graduates to thrive in an evolving legal landscape.”

Before making their decision, Georgetown officials said they conducted a study that found that GRE scores “are equally strong predictors of academic success” at Georgetown Law as LSAT scores.

Treanor added that the changes will allow students who have potential, but “might find the LSAT to be a barrier for whatever reason” to apply for the prestigious program. Some hindrances to taking the LSAT include costs of preparation and the actual exam. Its testing schedule is also more restrictive than the GRE.

The announcement comes ahead of an American Bar Association meeting where a council will consider potential changes to its policy that requires law schools to use a “valid and reliable admission test” in their admissions process.

Georgetown is following in the footsteps of the University of Arizona, which became the first law school to accept the GRE as well as the LSAT last year. Harvard Law School announced in March that it plans to pilot the same process and Northwestern Pritzker School of Law also announced their changes on Monday.