I've heard a lot of people recommending The Economist or Scientific American. The Economist has the same convoluted, passage type and structure you see on the RC and they have some abstract writing which could help you get through those longer, bori…
Hi Dav, I'm not sure about the US schools but maybe they do the same procedure that we do here in Canada? Maybe find out the last LSAT score that they will accept for this cycle. In Canada, for most schools, it is the February LSAT which gives you …
Hi ps. I would give it all I have until next week. Keep drilling, reviewing mistakes, and repeat. This is my strategy, and I have 5 prep tests remaining with drill periods in between and full blind review of all my answers. I'm also not scoring high…
Are you taking the newer prep tests? 60 and up? I've noticed an increase in the difficulty of the reading passages. I'm having the same problem as you though. What I'm doing to fix it is drilling at least one section of RC a day under timed conditio…
Patrick, I know 7sage sells a logic games bundle in the add-on section. It includes all games from PT 1-35 which will give you lots of material to work with. If you want more games past 35, then cambridge lsat sells them also.
Professor J.Y reporting it. That was a very thorough explanation and very interesting. Can't wait to analyse cases like this once in law school (fingers crossed).
I'm submitting everything before except of course for the lsat score. The only thing is I have to rush the personal statement, since I'm only done the draft and deadlines to apply in canada for most law schools is next week.
From what I'm familiar with, doing prep tests is the best way to increase score because you're putting yourself into test situations under time pressure. If you're retaking in December, I would say take as many prep tests as you can and do blind rev…
If you adequately blind review all of your answers and really see where you're making the mistakes, you can easily see a huge boost in improvement. If LG is your weakest section, keep drilling on that section on your off days or in between reviewing…
Yea I have sort of the same problem. There's always fluctuation in my correct answers either in the first LR part or the second. I think it might have to do with concentration when you do the second LR part, especially if its the third of fourth sec…
It all depends on your strengths/weaknesses. I would say blind review is very important, so don't try to burn yourself out or do too many PTs and not be able to adequately review your answers.
Really good tips here. I'm definitely going to try and do as many PTs as possible now. The only thing I'm concerned about is blind reviewing too quickly and not absorbing all of the information and learning from my mistakes.
Wow, four prep tests a week? That's crazy. I need to step up my game. I've been pacing with only two prep tests a week but I've realized that if I want to do at least 16 prep tests by the 7 week mark, I need to start doing three a week.
Seems like you're getting the concepts, but you're too anxious when you see a new game on a PT. You have to just focus and let yourself know that it is honestly the same game you've done before, it's only disguised with new words and names. I would …
Good luck! Remember, it's only a prep test! You still have plenty more of them and trust me, you will own them by the time you're finished with this LSAT phase.
Haha, yes, I do. Especially in the Logical Reasoning section, I find myself yelling in my head "What?! Who cares? What does that have to do with anything?!"
I would say with more games you'll gain more experience and thus, learn to have more faith in your game board. With more practice, you'll come to realize the most efficient way to set up your game board and make proper inferences so that you can eas…
I can't speak for the schools in the U.S, but in Canada, it really depends on which school you are applying to. Some schools average out your test scores, and others take your highest score.