Hi there! To answer your interest in achieving that specific LSAT score directly, I went through the CC. Then I began PTing at 150, after only two tests my score stabilized to 158 and 157; therefore, I believe if you took this seriously with enough …
Honestly this might sound bad, but a way I get rid of negative thoughts by telling myself that you can always retake the exam! (It stops my test anxiety, and allows me to just focus on practicing and learning the exam.) Maybe if you don't prefer the…
Go for it, go for a higher score on the LSAT, it'll pay off in the long run and get you into that LS of your dreams
plus, once you receive the score you want you can end up traveling or doing something else!! (Like working :O )
Sometimes, people would hire private tutors for just 1 or 2 sessions where the private tutor can see exactly what you're weak at! That manages to close the gap between your actual and BR score.
I've known a friend who diagnosed 156 and jumped to 173 on the actual LSAT in just three months of 7sage + LSAT Trainer. (This is during the time he was a full time student at his university, and studying roughly 2-3 hours a day.)
Six months is ach…
You can actually improve dramatically in just 6 weeks. For some people, they just need a method that clicks for them.
For me, going through 7sage's mechanistic style of tackling LR is improving my brain's way of tackling LR way faster than any othe…
Also, I purely believe hard work leads to success as well. If you truly work hard enough, you can achieve it. (Or come super close.)
The statement above comes from my own observations from my friends and my own testimony. (In HS I never tried and g…
I sixth retaking. I heard some law students argue that there's no such thing as a reverse splitter, because one can always work harder to improve their LSAT scores.