@Feb2018Taker I found the LSAT Trainer by Mike Kim to be extraordinary helpful in gaining a better understanding of LR and especially RC. I found Powerscore's RC strategies (basically, excessive notation of each line and paragraph) to be very time-c…
@Aspiring1L As someone who tried Powerscore before discovering 7sage I can confidently say that unless you are already an LSAT savant the return on investment will likely be fairly negligible. Fortunately, if you're willing to put in even just sever…
If I were you, I'd definitely take advantage of the fact that the LSAC no longer limits LSAT test takes to three and with even just a marginally better LSAT score you'd be a candidate for serious scholarship money at "lower end" T-14 schools. Obviou…
As someone who has tried other methods before finding 7sage (Powerscore and Kaplan) and has friends who took super-expensive prep courses, I can unequivocally say that 7sage is really the only serious option if you have/are willing to put in the tim…
Although I am only an aspiring high LSAT scorer, I have had the most success with taking very minimal notation in RC. Although it can be tempting and is certainly not a horrible idea to write a very brief summary (like three or four words brief), ov…
I definitely chose to focus on those areas within LR (MSS, Necessary Assumption, Strengthen and Weaken come to mind) that I knew needed a second glance, though I also reviewed some of the earliest, most basic curriculum lessons dealing with deconstr…
Still plowing through some LG foolproofing and taking a second look at the core curriculum, but I'm looking forward to joining everyone in the near future