How long ago did you first start studying? If you started after winter break and you're already at 161, it's probably be worth it to postpone. Or even keep studying and see where you are when the LSAC cancellation date is.
For me I have a feeling in my mind when I read an answer and I know it could be correct, but I know there must be a more complete version- thats the only time I would read them all. Also when i'm stuck i'll use POE. Hope this helps, I don't get th…
I have tried this, and I would not try this consistently, only as a method to get better. If you're depending on 3 passages, one bad passage and your score for the whole section is done
@mes08 @bonjoursm thanks for the input. I think I should clear it up the I'm doing at LEAST 10 hours a week. If I have a busy week with midterms I'll do 10, if I have more free time I'll go up to 20
@"Derek Kunhee Kim (김건희)" @"Nilesh S" good points. I'm confident that I can do it within a month because currently in scoring 16-19 on LR and only about 12 on LG. RC is always 11-12. I've read through 7sage that LG is easiest to master so I'm …
I take 2 PT's a week then go back, see what I did wrong, understand why its wrong then understand why the right answer is right. I also go back and look at my correct answers and see why my train of thought was correct. I improved 10 points in a m…
@emli1000 Sorry I just analyzed your question. From what LSAC.org says, they send them all your scores, as well as when you took them, and then send them an average of your scores. It's at the schools discretion on what to consider.
@nicole.hopkins Intermittent fasting really does the trick. With workouts in the morning fasted, your metabolism doesn't suffer. And all the cardio you really need is low intensity for 15 minutes along with high intensity weight training. Haven't…
What works best for my appetite and my busy schedule, which includes working out, eating, and class/ LSAT prep, is 16 hour fasting. It's good for burning fat during your workouts, and you don't need hours of intense cardio. At night, eat your last…
Same for me, I watch a logic game explanation video or do one before a PT. As far as motivation goes, I always think with each PT, I'm one step closer to a higher score on the LSAT.
Update: After Blind reviewing my most recent PT, I scored a 157. So thats a 143/157. Just to clarify, the best way to bridge this gap is just practice tests? I feel like I need to focus on getting my time management down
Thanks for the advice guys. As of right now I'm scoring anywhere between 9-15 right on the LR section. At this point it would be just as viable to guess on every one i'm not 100% sure of. That's why i'm going to focus a lot more time practicing LR
Thanks everyone for the advice, but the question I really had (yes, I know the way I write it makes it hard to identify, just like the LR we all love), will Kaplan's style of teaching contradict the way 7sage teaches?