You need to be flexible with this. There is no answer. It would be foolish to subscribe to reading the stem first on every question no matter what or else reading the stimulus first on every question no matter what. I can assure you that these metho…
You're not supposed to worry about keeping previous sections "fresh" during your initial training phases. You're worried about LR when you're supposed to be worried about LG. After you have mastered each section individually, then you can start taki…
Do more LR questions. If you cannot form the answer on about half of them, then you simply have not done enough of them.
You are too focused on the trees, too focused on the methodology, and you are overthinking it. You need to just practice and le…
Well, while people might suggest exercising in order to increase your brain's endurance, that is not alone enough. Your brain is its own muscle. Exercising is important for many things, but if you want to build your brain's endurance you have to foc…
Honestly, checking the time totally psyches me out, no matter how far ahead I am. I can check the time at question 20 and be only 18 minutes in and still get psyched out. I refuse to look at the time until I am finished with the section, then I chec…
Sadly, I don't have a team. I miss 1-3 consistently in every section, now. I guess LR is my easiest section. RC is second, because it's the section I get -0 on the least often. LG is kind of tied with RC. While I think it is usually the easiest sect…
@theLSATdreamer said:
i used to be a personal trainer, best advise i can give you is daily stretching, and there are some neck strengthening exercises that help, i work in an office so i stretch every morning because my neck and back are in th…
I have spent many years at a desk job and experimenting with yoga, pilates, and other forms of exercise. I have also suffered from neck and upper back pain. A lot of these issues are greatly reduced by the proper ergonomic equipment. As a supplement…
@"Alex Divine" said:
@"conrad.p" said:
@"Alex Divine" said:
Yeah, it might be an outlier, but no one scores those out of luck.
Is a conjecture or educated guess, or did you actually see this in a stu…
For example, if it is expected that 8 weakening questions would appear on any given exam, and that my success rate in the past with this type of question is 75%, then the priority level would be calculated as 2. Meaning that my failure rate (25%, or…
@LSAT2017123 said:
Hi everyone,
I hope everyone had a great weekend. I wanted to post to get some advice from all of you, especially those who have managed studying and working full-time at the same time.
To give a little background,…
@"Alex Divine" said:
Yeah, it might be an outlier, but no one scores those out of luck.
Is a conjecture or educated guess, or did you actually see this in a study?
@tylerdschreur10 said:
@"conrad.p" Ha, well If I discover the magic formula to RC success I'll be sure to share it! But i wouldn't hold your breath!
Is it just me, or does taking previously BRed PTs again under timed conditions seem to make …
Either you got lucky or something clicked and you're doing great. Don't be discourage about the former if it happens. Good luck! PS: I had a normal score for 38.
FWIW, I had about a dozen scores above 170 before blind reviewing at all, and when I started blind reviewing (with a method thorougher than what is taught on 7sage), my scores slowly and consistently fell at first and then slowly and consistently re…
There is no easy answer. To make things worse, for me, escaping the 170 plateau had nothing to do with knowledge. I was just being too passive a test taker, and overnight I determined that I would try tackling my PTs with a different "mindset," and …
Actually, I have had a similar problem. One recent practice test I scored a -1, -1, -2 on LG, LR, LR. Then on RC I missed 7. However, 5 of those were simply questions I could not get to. I can share how I overcame that timing issue, but if you are c…