I remember being stuck on this question months ago in my studies as I was confused with the part "mostly native trees and shrubs." I recall back I was confused and thought the "mostly" refers to the number of shrubs and native trees. I just revisite…
You can reduce the “priority” of wrong questions by doing a thorough blind review as well as noting the question types you are missing. I find it helpful to revisit core curriculum for fundamentals and work on question types.
Yes, we can tackle Necessary Assumption questions as MBT. Necessary assumption must hold and needed in order for us to have the argument. We are still trying to complete the argument with necessary assumption and the answer choice must be necessary.
I believe "I eat pies on Wednesdays." cannot be supported by the answer choice:"I always eat pies on Wednesdays." Always is an indicator with a strong emphasis and there is a set schedule for eating pies on Wednesdays. With "I eat pies on Wednesdays…
I think the point is to understand and figure out the structure of the argument for strengthen and weaken questions. Analogous examples can add strength to the argument with added support. The animals do not have to be similar but there must be adde…
I think it depends on the specific argument. In some arguments, there isn’t an error and your job is to try take away support between the premise and conclusion-weakening question. Other arguments have an error and the argument is weak. With flaw qu…
I would recommend taking a practice test or sections each week to see how you are doing. Make sure to review the practice tests and sections afterwards. Keep track off missed questions and try to note any patterns in missed questions.
I’ve also misread/misinterpreted the stimulus and answer choices, and I am improving LR. Focus on understanding the stimulus and don’t rush through it. Try to focus on the structure and this can help improve comprehension. In blind review, write dow…
I would also start reaching out to recommenders and let them know my interest in applying to law school for fall 2021. You will need to submit recommendation letters to law schools. In addition, work on building your resume as you will need to submi…
With blind review not improving, I would note the question types I am missing from BR I would watch JY's explanations and see what I am missing. In addition, I would review the core curriculum lessons on the question types.
I have heard great things about Loophole. Personally, I have 7 Sage and I am just taking more time to blind review LR sections. Breakdown the stimulus and write down reasoning.
You are not alone. I’ve taken the LSAT before and scored very low. The test is difficult and we just have to keep on going. I’ve been improving and I recommend reviewing the core curriculum for logical reasoning. Make sure to blind review, write out…
Focus on learning the fundamentals from the core curriculum. Do sections and make sure to blind review them afterwards. Take some practice tests and make sure to save most recent tests close to test day. Good luck!
@JerseyLife49: I think you should drill 10-12 questions from LR sections or just questions from the core curriculum. Do it timed and thorough blind review and see how that goes. I find that can build up to taking full sections when you are more. I w…
I would try and go through a bit of LR, LG, and RC each day from the core curriculum. It can be watching lesson videos and taking notes from the videos. After watching the videos, I would try some drill problems on my own in a timed setting and then…
I think it is best to save recent practice tests close to your actual test day. I would start with practice tests in the mid 30s and work my way up. It is important to blind review and understand the takeaways in each practice test.
I would recommend taking a break in between studying. Studying requires full concentration and won’t be efficient with exhaustion. Perhaps take nap, watch a movie, or even some delicious desserts to reward yourself after studying for the day. Having…