1: My major was listed, so I'm not entirely sure, but I'd think that if your major isn't listed, then "not listed" would be the appropriate selection.
2: You need to go ahead and send your transcripts. Once they've generated your report, go from th…
@"Adam Hawks" said:
I was unable to sign in to this today. If possible, could you please upload this to the webinar section?
@Walliums said:
Hi, are any of these going to get uploaded to the webinar section?
Will upload soon and let…
Starting soon!
@"montaha.rizeq" said:
I'm missing Wheel of Fortune and Jeopardy for this! You better not disappoint me Joshua Aldy!
That's too much pressure Montaha. I'll do my best, but I can't make any promises!
Hey @"Mo Zubair"
It's still important to time questions. It's just that the 1:24 shouldn't necessarily be your target time. And in the curriculum, it's a little less strict because the exercise is to learn the fundamentals, not pacing. It's just im…
Hey Liz, I struggled a lot with the issue of how to approach studying for the LSAT as well. It's something that can be reduced to a methodical approach though. If you can make it, I'm doing a webinar on Thursday and Friday that addresses this exact …
@anonclsstudent said:
I noticed that they started going to the elimination question right after each individual rule rather than doing it after going through the rules as a whole and thinking about deductions. Why did the process change?
Yea…
@slee146 said:
Thank you all for the comments!
I think subject matter is not an issue, but the hardest questions tend to be making inferences and most supported types. When I examine the ACs, the ones that are completely irrelevant or opp…
@akeegs92 said:
I have just been using the idea that it should take about 1:24 per question and timing myself off of that per set. I didn't know if individually timing each question was a good or bad thing. Thanks!
So this isn't actually ve…
Thanks @Q.E.D ! Your knowledge of formal logic has always added a great perspective, and I always love opening a thread to see you've provided some input!
Agree with @kataput6 . Even if something does go wrong and they don't catch an error, you have the option to request a manual score for something like $15. So if your score comes out way off of your expectations and you think that might have been an…
Black & white is fine.
And yeah, basically anything that isn't explicitly allowed is banned. So if it's not on the list of approved items, don't take it!
Hey G! So, I really love retakes for a couple of reasons.
Unless you're reviewing your PTs with absolute effectiveness, there is still value left in them. And that value is likely to be the most elusive value in the test, so it's great to go back a…
I definitely encourage untimed drills to start with. Keep track of time and hope to finish under, but it's fine to just see where you're at. That will give you a good baseline to know where you need to work back from. Make sure you're not returning …
Great question @jkatz1488 . You should start incorporating these strategies when you're consistently BRing above your target score. Until you have that, you can execute your understanding of the fundamentals with 100% efficiency and it still won't b…
For me, it's when there's an assumption that is so obvious, we don't realize it isn't actually stated. So something along the lines of:
If we let students use cell phones to look up information during tests, there will be no reason for them to lear…
Lots of great advice already, but just to reinforce what I think is the most important thing: Slower is faster. That's counterintuitive, but only one of two things can happen if you rush through it: You'll have to return and basically do it all over…
Normally about a month is pretty good. Are you just way above/below the medians at the schools you're applying to? In those situations they'll often be able to make a quick decision, but I don't know what's going on otherwise, lol.