It can be helpful, but it isn't tailored to the LSAT like an LSAT-specific course. And you might have relevant information already from being in the computer science field.
9.3.1: If I have one orchid, I need at least 2 roses. If two orchids, then at least four roses.
27.2.3: If 2 people see H, 1 person sees F. If 4 people see H, 2 people see F.
32.3.2: Every time F is selected, F's amount is more than or equal to …
Does anyone know if you're allowed to access your ziploc if a test is delayed for awhile and you're in the test room, like if you want a snack or a tissue?
Sure. First, don't give up. Read a lot of them untimed. Use RC as a way to help LR. Keep a journal. Figure out the best ways you learn. And maybe watch the webinar on "When to Diagram LR" from Resources.
It'll likely be OK as long as the score report isn't super-close to the application deadlines. Spivey Consulting has a blog post on this that you may find helpful. Its headline is winter LSATs or something like that and his main argument is it's g…
Don't give up. Try to get really strong LORs, consider writing an explanation for the GPA, and/or maybe catch some ThinkingLSAT episodes that discuss "splitter" applications.
High school classes for high school credit only are not included in the LSAC transcripts. The LSAC GPA only has classes taken for college credit up to the point of someone's first undergraduate degree. So classes taken in high school for college c…
No, it wouldn't. It's within the 5 year time limit. The only real exception would be if there's a big problem and you see a need to redo it, but usually one sample is enough.
I don't think improvement can be rushed, or at least not in general. You may want to postpone the test, as more test dates are being offered these days.
Keep notes, use explanations now that you've done BR, don't give up, realize this has happened to just about all of us so you're not alone, be glad it didn't happen in a live graded testing situation, and take this as a learning experience on a long…