I would do a max of two more PTs and make sure you're done by about a week before the test. You really want to make sure you take the last week pretty easy. I would redo a couple of the newer ones, understanding that your scores will be a bit inflat…
I would do a mixture of both. I think that older PTs (especially 40-60) are close enough to current ones to be worth studying and taking. You could also break up the ones you've already done and drill them/foolproof the games/using them as fake expe…
I would focus on getting into the best ranked school that you can. Having focus areas doesn't generally mean a whole lot, from what I've gathered. If you have a JD you'll be able to practice health law, and a T-14 will be more likely to get you a jo…
Are you talking about the sections of the core curriculum? Or just sections in general? If you're talking about sections in general, I would highly advise against breaking them apart like that. If you do two months of RC while completely ignoring LR…
A drop of a few points from practice average to test day is pretty expected, but a 15 point drop suggests that there's more to be learned. You mentioned that test day conditions weren't good, which can't be controlled obviously, but they can be prep…
Hi, and welcome to the forums!
It's really too late to get the full benefit of a 7sage course before the November exam. It takes 2-3 months to go through the curriculum, and then you need to drill and PT after that to nail down the skills and get a…
I think you should start using it during PTs. If you don't like actually wearing it, you can just set it on your desk so it's there to glance at if you so choose but you don't HAVE to, so that way it won't feel like it's interrupting you or like it'…
7sage is wonderful, but if you're set on taking the exam in November then it's really too late to utilize it. It takes 2-3 months to go through the core curriculum, and then you need to drill and PT to put the things you've learned into practice. Ho…
On lsac.org you can see the right answers compared to your answers and you can see your answer sheet. You will be able to see the test, but it won't be your test booklet with your notes etc. It could be that you had a bubbling error, or it could be …
I agree with all of the above. I think that if you really want to go to Harvard and you don't take the extra time to study for the LSAT, then you're selling yourself short. Like you said, you have a great GPA. I think at this point you just have to …
Hi! I’m feeling super meh about my score. Got a 169, my average practice score was 172-173 so not a huge drop or anything but I’m a little disappointed. Going to retake for sure, but I know it’s a good score to have on my record
Honestly, most academia seems pretty left leaning. There are exceptions of course, but in general I don't think it necessarily looks bad to law schools.
Have you tried slowing the videos down? If you scroll your mouse over the video, in the bottom left corner there's the option to change the speed of the video. I know this isn't a complete or perfect solution, but it might help at least a little.
Find out if there's a particular question type that you are consistently getting wrong (or getting it wrong more often than the other types). Drill the heck out of it. After foolproofing, are you consistently going -3 or better on timed LG sections?…
I'll admit that I'm pretty bad a skipping, but when I do skip problems they're ones that just totally make no sense after reading the stimulus and question. Sometimes I'll even read it over a second time because then it'll click, but if it still doe…
@tekken1225 said:
Yale, Stanford, Harvard:
-Because they are Yale, Stanford, and Harvard
Same
Also NYU or Columbia because I adore NYC and I think that law school would be a great chance to live there for a few years to have the experie…
I take it you want to apply next fall and start law school in 2020? I think that for now it's okay to really focus on doing well in your classes and let the LSAT take a bit of a backseat. Don't ignore it completely, but maybe just aim for five or te…
It's very, very unlikely that you'll be able to push into the high 160s/low 170s by the November test. I think it's okay to be registered for it, but you should go into it accepting that if you're not hitting your target scores a couple weeks before…
Yeah we’re going to need a bit more info. Are you trying to go from 145 to 155? Or 160 to 170? Not all ten point jumps are equally difficult. And when you say that your score hasn’t been going up, do you mean in the last week? Month? Two months?
Yeah I definitely agree that one per week is plenty as long as that's not the only studying you're doing. I did PT once or twice after a full day of work and it was brutal.
@"Rigid Designator" I think what happens a lot of the time is that people use "median" and "50th percentile" interchangeably regarding schools' admission, which as you pointed out, is inaccurate.