Hey so i cant answer your first question. But i think that you should focus your efforts on getting that score that you are happy with b4 you get involved in writing essays. Personally i wrote mine when i took some time off of studying to avoid LSAT…
I am a big advocate of Stronglifts 5×5 its 3 times a week and is great for overall strength development. There is also a nifty app for tracking your progress
@twssmith yeah iv done those passages and noticed the similarity, after sitting and analyzing the passage for 1.5 hrs i feel like i completely understand it but i dont feel any better prepared for another passage akin to it [if that makes sense]. N…
Hi, i would suggest taking a practice test now to guage where u are in each section respectively. Then i would put advise foolproofing until u can score around -2. And then get to the other sections. This is what has helped me. Foolproofing is goin…
I would agree that following the syllabus would be to your benefit, as you progress through LR you will realize that many question types play off of the same fundamentals. Its important to build the foundation b4 you start on the roof
Im gonna second what @acsimon said above, you need to factor in the possibility that feb test will have a curveball miscellaneous game and if it doesn't go as planned, waiting between tests can lead to your LG skills atrophying. I would advise you…
Thanks @J.Y. Ping, i wanna just add that PT 73 knocked my socks off abit and i spent close to a week shoring up the weaknesses it exposed and my average went up
By a 2 points!!!, i owe this all to having a hard PT...THANK YOU PT 73!!!
Speaking from experiance, i have been studying 30/35 hrs a week while working, for 14 months. Im just thick lol. But the LSAT doesnt work by cramming, you have to let the techniques soak up like a sponge, so in my opinion doing 35 hrs a week is less…
Yeah i agree with @10000019 on this. For many of us it took months to get to a 163. I would suggest pushing to february if you think you can gain some points between now and then
Hey welcome to the LSAT journey. I would suggest starting the core curriculum from 7sage. Its, in my opinion, the most in depth program in preparation.
I would focus on flaw type questions and really getting good at recognizing cookie cutter type questions, this will really boost your speed and confidence
Hey, i would ask schools how they view addendas for low GPAs. How much they factor in softs,
Work experiance.
There are likely many people at the forum so you wont have much time to speak to adcoms about your personals.. good luck!
Hey @dennisgerrard i had similar thoughts but a friend introduced the manhatten prep RC guide and i am a beleiver, even though RC is highly subjective, if low res/high res didnt work for you. I would suggest giving it a look