Drill LG, starting the with the LG parts of core curriculum. It will probably pay off more than PTs. LSAC gives you points for getting questions right -- they don't care how many PTs we've taken!
There are some questions you can answer or partially answer without reading everything
1) "What is discussed in A and B?" : You can eliminate a few answers after reading A
2) Questions that only refer to passage A
3) Questions that refer specific…
@sweezyseason said:
Thanks so much! I was not interpreting the conditionals properly and as obvious as it sounds I totally missed the eligibility as necessary to win, and instead interpreted it as a sufficient condition along with the other one. Ma…
There's no need to diagram. Also, I didn't watch JY's explanation so I don't know if this is redundant
Eligibility: You are eligible if (and only if!) you have a good record
Winning: If you exceeded reasonable expectations while saving a life, the…
@LSATaker said:
Can I ask a question too?
How many hours did you study per day&how many questions or PTs did you take before you come to this result?
So nice&congrats
I did 10 PTs. Plus, I did the core curriculum. I'm still learning, thou…
@dannyshaw said:
Hi Steve!
Thanks for sharing! Congrats! So I am missing 4-6 per LR section. I was just wondering what your strategy was to have flawless LR sections? That would be a dream come true if I could see a flawless section! Thanks
Hi D…
Thanks guys.
There used to be a few questions per section that I just didn't get, even during blind review... now, when I see a trap answer choice, I hear JY's voice saying "What?! Why do we care?! Oldest trick in the book!"
Totally depends on how fast you are. Some people are fast enough to have time leftover to eliminate all answers. On LR I'm fast enough to do this. But on LG I'm not.
Your efforts weren't wasted: you're probably better at the LSAT now than you were before you took those PTs.
Personally, I prefer not to focus on the individual scores. If you're going to track anything, then track a trailing average of your last …
Too confident? You'll assume that answer choices are correct by virtue of the fact that you've chosen them. You won't do well.
Not confident enough? You'll waste too much time second-guessing your answers. You won't do well.
In short, I take the…
2 thoughts on this
1) Less control over the environment. There's ambient noise. Some proctors or fellow test-takers could be disruptive. It's generally less comfortable than being at home.
2) Lack of honesty with themselves. Someone may sincerel…