At this time, the option to download and print PTs is only available for older PrepTests (PTs 1-94). Unfortunately, the tests in the current format (PTs 101–158) cannot be downloaded directly.
However, you can still print sections from PTs 101–158 by switching your Drills page to the "Obsolete format." Then, navigate to the advanced drill builder, locate the sections equivalent to PTs 101–158 (you can use this table as a guide), and print those drills.
To find the printing option for drills, please click on the "QuickView" button followed by the download icon on the left side of your "PDF Password." The password for the PDF is your 7Sage account email address. Please see the sample screenshots below:
From my own perspective and experience, but printing off LR pdfs is not very helpful. I am one of those persons that needs to see text on paper, so I understand that the paper approach can seem helpful for a variety of reasons. But when it comes to this, yeah, there are better ways to studying than printing PDFs. Probably the worst approach, honestly.
Comments
You can do it on the obsolete view; i haven't seen on the new format tho
Hi @"awheatley.johnson"
At this time, the option to download and print PTs is only available for older PrepTests (PTs 1-94). Unfortunately, the tests in the current format (PTs 101–158) cannot be downloaded directly.
However, you can still print sections from PTs 101–158 by switching your Drills page to the "Obsolete format." Then, navigate to the advanced drill builder, locate the sections equivalent to PTs 101–158 (you can use this table as a guide), and print those drills.
To find the printing option for drills, please click on the "QuickView" button followed by the download icon on the left side of your "PDF Password." The password for the PDF is your 7Sage account email address. Please see the sample screenshots below:
I hope this helps!
From my own perspective and experience, but printing off LR pdfs is not very helpful. I am one of those persons that needs to see text on paper, so I understand that the paper approach can seem helpful for a variety of reasons. But when it comes to this, yeah, there are better ways to studying than printing PDFs. Probably the worst approach, honestly.