@"victoria.villella" said:
Question on the LSAT Writing section - it says within my LSAC account under status: Exam Initiated, but I completed it?? Am I being paranoid or is it possible they didn't get my LSAT Writing?
did you hit the submit…
Personally, I can only handle about 1 per week. After that it usually takes me 2-3 days to blind review and then once i'm done ill look at the explanations for questions that I flagged or got wrong. Then I use the rest of the days to drill. This is …
Hey there @daisyharding08 sure thing! This is not to say this is the only way to properly BR RC, just one of the many ways that i've found effective.
So I actually got this strategy from @"Lucas Carter". And pretty much what you do is, after each R…
So these are not all the same logic, one is conditional logic (sufficient, necessary) while the other is causation logic (which has a temporal relationship).
Conditional logic has nothing to do with causation. Essentially conditional logic is just …
Well I think you already know some of the questions you need to work on, so you can begin by drilling those. In terms of taking an LR section overall, do you have a solid skipping strategy in place? if not you'll need to develop one. Another thing y…
Well it depends on the schools LSAT score. But given the fact that you have a proven track record at their school, so long as you’re numbers are where they should be I’d imagine they’d be happy to accept an alumni. Will the fact that you graduated f…
It all depends on your strengths and weaknesses. That being said, some of the most prevalent subjects tested on the LSAT are conditional logic, causation logic, Universal and Existential quantifiers. Also, if you're scoring anywhere higher than -3 i…
I disagree, I don't think this will really affect your application, if at all. Many deans of admissions have spoken out about this- getting misdemeanors in college etc, things of this nature, so long as thats all behind you and theres no recurring p…
You should be able to find a few old ones by searching on google. “Get aquatinted” also gave me an error at first, I just kept refreshing and it worked.
As mentioned above, you’re quickest route to the 160’s would be by picking up points in LG. I'd keep foolproofing but make sure you're not just memorizing the games, instead focus on the inferences- seeing as those are what recur over and over again…
The only time you should cancel is if you’re absolutely certain you made a detrimental mistake that’s going to prohibit you from achieving your score. As humans we’re often our worst critics and our minds tend to over exaggerate how bad we did. So n…
Well I’m going to be the optimist in this situation. @VerdantZephyr brings up some excellent points in terms of T25 and T20 schools. However, I don’t quite agree with the degree of softs necessary- though they would certainly help. He’s right in tha…
@VerdantZephyr Well there’s the silver lining, that will save you some $$. But I hear you, the application process is expensive, but just be glad we’re not applying to med school 😂 and thanks right back at ya.
In regards to the first question, I think so long as your writing doesn't get flagged you should be fine. I'm not too sure about your second question though, you should give LSAC a call.
Take the two passages that you struggled with the most from the section and write out low res/high res, MP, tone, attitude, structure. Then write an explanation for each answer choice.
Sorry to hear about that, I’ve heard of other people having connection issues and most of them ultimately end up getting a voucher for the subsequent LSAT administration. I would call LSAC over the phone and explain the situation to them, they’ve be…
Definitely not! Necessary assumptions must be true! They are needed for the argument to stand a chance. So in a sense you can treat necessary assumption questions as must be true questions.
Hey there,
The standard LSAT is composed of 5 35 minute sections. Only 4 sections are graded 1LG, 1RC and 2LR’s + 1 experimental section which could be any of the three types. You won’t know which one is the experimental section. There’s roughly a …