I recommend that you try doing mindfulness meditation. It can be difficult for people with ADHD but in my experience it helps you focus on the present moment. When you're reading a stimulus, often the biggest problem is that your brain might wander …
@kpane said:
Okay great thank you @Ohnoeshalpme! Since it’s more along the lines of 1 test a week, what do you to go back and review these questions other than blind review just to ensure you’re correcting your mistakes? Also, do you study eve…
In general you want to space out your PT's by a specific number. Maybe you want to take 20 from 40-80. You would do 40, 42, 44, 46, 48, 50 etc. In this scenario you'll see a natural progression of the tests over time, while still preserving that pro…
You should fool proof each game that you come across, but don't do more than the ones that are recommended in each section of the CC. Once you get exposure to all the different variations of the games, then you can go back and fool proof every other…
I'm guessing that sleeve erasers are any type or eraser that are attached to a sliding mechanism. Maybe they are concerned about students hiding answers inside? Not sure lol
I think that this trend is mostly in response to a dip in applications that was experienced by law schools at the start of the recession. Schools like the University of Arizona started accepting the GRE because they wanted to pick up grad students w…
You should follow the fool-proof method as it is explained in the CC. This means - doing the game, watching the explanation, doing it again, checking to see if you are under time, if yes, set aside (for now) if not, repeat this process. Once you fin…
Each game takes me about 45+ minutes to fool-proof all the way through. You should aim to do every game from PT's 1-35. So you're looking at something like 90-100 hours before you're done fool-proofing, depending upon how many attempts you need befo…
@alyhobbs said:
Hey! So I definitely agree with @LivingThatLSATdream that taking 2 PTs a week would be too much. I was wanting to do the same but realistically you have to spend a lot of time BRing and doing that twice a week on top of doing d…
@AshleighK said:
@Ohnoeshalpme Do you happen to know the general advice on the opposite scenario? High GPA but low LSAT score?
Reverse splitters (GPA 75th, LSAT 25th) generally have lower acceptance rates when compared to conventional splitt…
@LivingThatLSATdream This general wisdom is based off of data from law school indices which vary from school to school. One good source is: http://www.top-law-schools.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=274785. The link will take you to a forum, scro…
You definitely won't need t14 to practice family law in your area. Go to the best t30 or even t50 school in your region that offers you some scholarship money.
The general advice is that if you are below a given school's 25th percentile in gpa you would need to score above their 75th percentile in the lsat. More specifically, a 0.1 GPA below the 25th usually needs to come with a 1+ higher lsat score than t…
@"Return On Inference" said:
Definitely recommend going over the CC again if you're not BRing 175+.
The CC is fantastic, and the concepts (when mastered) will enable you to answer any question the LSAT throws at you.
I went through t…
LSAT writers are very specific about the words that they use. If they wanted to say majority, they would do it in other ways. Terms like "public opinion" are often used in ways that make them appear to be equivalent to "most" or "all" but they are d…
Check out the Post-CC webinar. It gives a solid plan of attack for the stages of prep that follow the CC.
Link: https://classic.7sage.com/webinar/post-core-curriculum-study-strategies/
An assumption made in this argument is that those who use "folk remedies" do so in lieu of seeking effective treatment. B fills the gap because it elaborates on the fundamental principle that is at play in the argument: whatever gets in the way of p…
@levonm7 said:
@"Seeking Perfection" @Ohnoeshalpme @btate87 @keets993 @Micolash @LSATcantwin So guys final question, I can study FULL TIME until September and as I said I have all the preptest (PT 7 to the latest) do you guys think I should go…
3 months is pretty uninformative. It doesn't matter if you have 3 months or a year. What matters is the amount that you can study each day. If you work, go to school, or have any other time consuming obligations, a 10 point improvement is going to b…
Obviously when you're taking a test you can't know before hand what the difficulty is. However, it seems that the general rule among high-scorers is to skip a question that throws an unusually large wrench into your plan. Perhaps you come to a quest…
Based on what you've stated above, I recommend that you try doing a series of argument-part drills. You can follow this with timed LR section drilling. As you state above, you often neglect to circle questions the questions that you are getting wro…
I think that this really depends on what your score and score breakdown was. For example, if you were PTing in the low 170's and scored a low 160 on test-day, your study plan would be totally different from someone who was PTing in the High 150's an…
Meditation, diet, exercise are the big three. If you already have control of these things, great job and keep it up! If you're missing any one of these things it's in your best interest to incorporate it into your routine. There's not a ton that you…
Our two ideas are: "save the environment" and "national government". Must introduces a necessary condition so we are left with:
"If you are a national government --> you save the environment"
I'm not sure why you think that the correct translat…
I haven't studied any RC so far but in for LG i'd recommend more intense blind review. You can even go back through an entire fresh test and take it without any time constraints to ensure that you don't fall into a seemingly easy trap question. I wo…