I agree with @"Alex Divine" and @"Cant Get Right". LG was consistently my best section but then it dipped down again. I think what has been beneficial on trying to get back has been just to do what you're doing. Do games over and over again. Note ga…
Hi! I agree with the sentiment above. I would be as keen as possible in identifying your weaknesses. Drilling your weaknesses is how you're going make the biggest leaps in your studies. When you start to improve, be aware that your weaknesses will s…
Hi! I think there is no better RC practice than to keep doing passages over and over. As mentioned, I would stick to PTs 1-35 for this. This helped me tremendously. Also I would read the trainer. I know it's pretty basic for RC but it can really hel…
I agree with the general sentiment. But I would strongly advocate to stop taking tests. These are finite resources. Identify your weaknesses, go back to the lessons, and drill until you thoroughly understand.
I agree with both @AllezAllez21 and @bswise2. Printing an extra copy and typing out my reasoning as paid dividends to my studies.
Another thing I would say is no matter how deep you think you are looking at questions, you can always take it to anot…
I skip pretty liberally. So I skip about 4 questions before the last page. I usually get there around 20 mins. Then when I get to the last page then I go back over all my skips before finishing the section. Sometimes a question will wreck me so I'll…
As @Mellow_Z said, this is burnout. Take a whole week off. Don't do any LSAT, don't look at forums. Don't watch videos. Just detox yourself. Comeback with confidence and the right frame of mind and you'll be right back on the saddle
This is a really good question for learning purposes.
You have two circles, A and B. A is within B. So we know that everything is a part of A is also a part of B. Thus, we have a conditional statement: A --> B. So within A, there are 100 trees. …
I take screenshots of the old scantron the actual score breakdown before I take. Then I compare and see if I am getting questions wrong consistently. These questions I usually cut out and put in my secret stash.
I agree with @akeegs92 and @tanes256. I usually do them until I feel comfortable, and then if I struggle in my PT phase, I will drill a particular question type.
Even if you are to burn through all of them, you still have explanations to all of the…
Okay I've been thinking about this and I just want to clarify something. Let's see an example.
All cats have fur.
All cats like to have their fur brushed.
Therefore, you should brush your cat's fur.
I mean should we? Even though they like it, ma…
Also, not to sound contrarian, I don't think, in your example, your conclusion is "proved" to be true. What if it is in a bad area or you would have to relocate and if you relocate you can't afford it? Or maybe you just don't want to ride the commut…
@7SageThanks said:
What I'm struggling with is whether or not descriptive premises alone could be so strong that they would prove a prescriptive conclusion.
I mean...if this was the case, it wouldn't be an SA question. We would presumably …
I love it when I can't make up my mind but an extenuating circumstance decides for me haha congrats! You made the right decision if you weren't comfortable
I agree with @akeegs92 and @"david.busis" . Having everything ready won't delay things further. Plus the majority of applicants submit around that time anyways.
Registration:
http://www.lsac.org/jd/lsat/test-dates-deadlines/
Hope this helps!
Hi!
So unless you don’t know what is going on, I wouldn’t go back to the CC. you are going to drive yourself crazy haha especially if there are things you already know. If you can identify the conclusion 10/10 times, you probably don’t need to revi…
I don't think it matters much either to be honest. Take the time to study. Studying while at university is already very stressful and can effect a lot of things. If it is only going to raise you up that much, I don't think it's worth it.
Hi!
I agree with the general sentiment here. Don't rush your studies to achieve your target score. You are embarking on a journey. You decide when to get off. But enjoy the ride along the way!
Short answer: it depends.
Long answer: It really depends on the argument. For example, on the question from PT 22, the argument just isn’t strong enough by using “should.” I would argue that isn’t going to be strong enough in most cases in order to…
Hi!
So I think a few things matter here. The first is whether or not your school factors it in. The reason that I say this is because in LSAC's GPA description they literally say "All undergraduate" work. Even if it contributed nothing towards your…