I agree, think you are fine. One A- in a field of As will not make much of a difference, it certainly won't qualify as a "drop in grades." I think the only reason that it might make a difference would be if that A- brought you below a school's media…
In general, once I finish a PT I'm mentally drained. So typically I will take a break for an hour or so and then usually go through the LG section that same day. It is much less mentally taxing to knock out LG than it would be to BR an LR or RC sect…
I had a similar thought, are you getting at the distinction between Congress being prohibited from taking certain actions and prohibiting the state governments from taking those same actions?
@spinosan I have wondered similar things about those statistics. I can find the raw numbers for how many students from various schools get clerkships, and The Princeton Review published percentages in their latest rankings. But like you said, I feel…
@The Judges If I had to guess, I would assume that the April exam will be called off as well. I think the most likely outcome is that we are all looking at the June administration unfortunately.
Hi there!
As you said, A is well supported, mostly by lines 29-35, but really all of that paragraph. As far as why C is wrong, that paragraph outlines several reasons why written language will never match its oral equivalent exactly. However, nowhe…
Hi there!
I think that answer choice B is correct because is very closely hugs the passage. It is important to remember exactly what the question stem is asking as well. We are not being asked for a principle that underlies the entire passage, but …
Hi! no worries at all, I think that lines 36-42 give us two important things. First, as you noted in your initial post, the rhetorical question posed to us by the author suggests arbitrariness. Although, since the question is asking about the Northe…
Hi there! I don't believe that there is a single line to point to that says verbatim "standardizing traditional languages requires arbitrary choices." However, given the tone of the passage and a couple specific lines of text, I think it is a very r…
I agree with the above, I think that there is significant value in retaking old sections. Generally, the most useful ways to do this fall into two categories for me. If there was a section that I performed particularly poorly on, I'll wait awhile so…
I have no idea what the odds of them setting up remote testing are... does anyone know what that remote testing would even look like if we were implemented? I know some schools that do online exams have people download a program that makes sure they…
Given that I believe that CDC is recommending that no groups of 50 or larger gather until at least May, I am inclined to think April will be canceled unfortunately. Which likely means we will all end up deferred to June and have to hope for the best…
It is something that you will have to get a feel for I think. Under timed conditions, I would try to do as much in your head as you believe you can accurately do. As you said, that will save a lot of time. If you have to map things there are still w…
I don't think that C is a sufficiency/necessity flaw. If you accept that the sufficient conditions of Premise 1 and C are close enough to be the same, both of them have "only" as the group 2 indicator which makes "intrinsic properties of art" the ne…
Just doing a hard refresh should sort that out for you, here is a link describing how to do it
https://www.getfilecloud.com/blog/2015/03/tech-tip-how-to-do-hard-refresh-in-browsers/#.XmvAZJNKjUI
I was actually just about to report the same problem. After refreshing the page 2-3 times it seems to calm down until trying to access a different page on the website?
I certainly had the same thought as you did for awhile, going back to the first circled question to start my second round. However, the difficulty of the questions does not always scale up perfectly throughout the section. Sometimes there are very c…
It takes some careful reading, but you sound like you already have the framework down. For an MSS question, the information in the stimulus will flow downward to support one of the answer choices. That "flow" will be reflected in the question stem. …
Thank you to everyone who has responded so far! At this point I probably have as many individuals interested as I can responsibly handle, but I will update this if I think I could take on a couple more students!
I personally thought that PT81 was quite challenging considering its curve. Its curved like its an easy test, but I thought the LR was some of the hardest I've seen on any test recently. So go figure, maybe it was me? I also thought that PT71 had a …
For true Most Strongly Supported questions the support is flowing down. Your task is to use the information given in the stimulus, and that information alone, to support one of the answer choices.
Are you running into this confusion on the newer te…
Hi there!
How much you study per day depends in part on how much else you have going on. I would recommend getting in at least 3-4 hours a day 6 days a week. I also started out studying by reading through all of the powerscore bibles, unfortunately…
I wholeheartedly agree, I would focus on really boosting your score substantially and try for next cycle. If you are able to get it up enough and get into a school that is fairly highly ranked, such as CLS, I see no reason why your dream of academia…
It depends in part on what you are looking for, I would suggest doing the tests that are known to be challenging. They have more generous curves, so you shouldn't see your score dip too much, but that will also give you experience with the worst tha…