I encountered a similar issue in the Army many times. I had several direct supervisors who wrote at about a sixth grade level and while they might have been happy to help, there was no way I would let a law school see a letter that was riddled with …
I would say score the test twice, once with the error and once without. That way you see what you could have gotten without the error and also have a good reflection of your actual understanding.
^^^ this so much. It really hit me hard during that GoT episode that JY broke down. Couldn't believe he posted that after I watched it. Felt like he read my mind... Or he's just programming us
Definitely bubble page by page in LR, and try subvocalizing when you do it. So read the answers back to yourself from the test book and then repeat the sequence as you record them on the scantron. See if that makes a difference for you.
Did just the LG Bundle for a couple weeks, then jumped right into PTs and then after about 5 or so I started really letting the analytics guide my prep from there to shore up any weaknesses.
For the difficult academic ones I think the best place to start is in and around the department you majored in. Hopefully you did better in your major than other areas and perhaps even crossed paths with certain professors in multiple classes. Also …
It scales automatically. You just have to make sure it meets the other requirements and that it is recognizably you. Just try it out and upload a picture and see how it works for you.
The curve normalizes each test so if your prep is on point then it really shouldn't matter. Now whether or not the difficulty plays to your strengths or not is impossible to know so don't worry about this and just keep prepping.
Do what you can, when you can. Understand that burnout is a cumulative condition from all your obligations, not just LSAT prep. And know that this may just take a lot longer than you think it will.
If you're aiming for a 165 then you're not shooting for any of the few schools that care about multiple takes. Almost every school only cares about your highest take. If you don't get your score you won't know what you need to work on and it will ha…
Don't cancel. It's not remotely worth it to cancel and getting a mediocre score might help focus you so you don't take it unprepared again. You're likely writing an addendum either way so you may as well see the score.
STEM PhDs are a very good soft and I'm sure your WE is as well. I would definitely retake if you don't hit your target score. Your GPA will likely be looked upon slightly more favorably than pretty much every other major, especially if you didn't go…
I would just get used to it. The inside of those is some nonsense and you're likely going to do more harm than good. I had one stop on me and the watch repair place had no idea what was going on inside after they opened it.
Quite frankly I think you should know where your application is weakest and strongest before you even apply. I would never hit up a school to ask them about my application in this manner, especially if I wanted to apply in a future cycle. If you kno…
Definitely don't share the LOR. Too much risk of some lifted phrasing or something along those lines that will be very suspicious. I would drop the first prof, go with the second, and find another.
Just save your money and go read Spivey's entire ~200 page thread on TLS... That's where I got the vast majority of my thousands of dollar's worth of useful information.