And even if you do remember things, the process of getting to the right answer is the most important. Can you explain why the right answer is right and why all the wrong answers are wrong? That has just as much value ,if not more value, as seeing a …
Khan academy has a list of exactly which tests it takes its material from. All of the ones labeled 'practice test' should be completely fresh for you unless you saw it on princeton review
https://www.khanacademy.org/test-prep/lsat/lsat-lessons/abou…
"Average" is 3-6 months, but as mentioned above, what you personally need to do is dependent on your goal score vs. your diagnostic as well as how fast you can learn the material. And also, how much free time do you have for studying. Someone who ca…
I think it depends on what's actually causing your slump whether doing 3 in a row will help your endurance. It sounds like the break might be throwing you off more than the sections themselves potentially.
Maybe try once where you do three sections…
Untimed work is more indicative of your understanding. Unless your untimed work takes 35 minutes or less, it's not indicative of your performance level. Rather, what your performance level can be once your able to think a little bit faster and under…
Don't stress about "catching up"
The most important thing is that the lessons stick in your head. So just focus on getting back into a solid routine rather than speeding through to get to where you "should" be
Yeah when writing anything, if you have an acronym that isn't immediately known by everyone, spell it out the first time with the abbreviation in parentheses. Then you can use the abbreviation every time after that.
Your goal is never too high to shoot for. If your PTs are 155-161, then upping that range to 160-164 is perfectly reasonable for August.
You know what to expect now, so it's just a matter of execution at this point. Good luck!
If you're cool just going wherever they accept you, then yeah that's probably fine. But if you have a target school in mind, January is a bit late to be taking your first LSAT, especially if you don't get the score you need.
Do you feel like you ab…
@rschade18 said:
A 156 after 6 months of studying for my first LSAT. I don’t know if I should be proud or concerned with my score.
If you can honestly you worked as hard as you could before the exam and did everything in your power to be in …
@SwissCheese4123 said:
Did anyone have human rights/silk in Colombia/Locke/bipedalism on RC? Thought it was pretty dense and basically ran out of time! I can be anywhere between -0 to -6 on RC though, so it's hard to judge... hoping the other …
International people joining the party now. I just finished. I don't feel bad, but I don't feel great either.....
I had some technical difficulties, so ended starting an hour late. Proctor was fine enough, but they did interrupt me during LG right …
If you're starting completely fresh and/or your diagnostic score was in the 140s or lower, you should probably just go in order.
If you got at least 150 on your diagnostic test and/or you've studied for the LSAT a little before, you can jump around…
If your argument was strong and that's your only typo, i highly doubt that's going to be make or break against you. They know you're writing under a time limit. While spelling and grammar are important, they want to see a coherent argument first and…
The whole point of doing the game after the video is to improve! The idea is that if you can make the inference in a specific game, you can make the same type of inference in a similar set up.
To check if you've really mastered a particular game, …
It depends on how intensely you BR, then how in depth you review your wrong answers. So if you go hard, you could very well be taking 12 hours total. But if you don't go as in depth, maybe it's more like 6-8 (including test time).
Depends on how yo…
If you're signed up for the June LSAT, you're already signed up for LSAT Writing. If you want to receive your score on time, you need to do it ASAP. This can be before or after the LSAT MC test. There's a link in your LSAC account for taking the LSA…
I think that estimation is just based on the average of each test's actual curve results. Each test is curved differently, so you can't definitively say -25=160.
For example one PT a -25 might be 160 but on a different PT it's a 158.
Did you use the password reset loophole to schedule your time before the official email was sent? My speculation is if you did that, LSAC doesn't have record of you clicking the link in their official email, and that's why you got the email.
Anyway…
I did as well.
My guess is that if you used the password reset trick, then you never clicked the link in LSAC's email. And they probably have an auto e-mail generated based on whether you clicked their link.
But my Proctor U still has my exam sche…
If you haven't already, take May 2020 since it's closest to what you'll see on the test this weekend. Good luck!
If you have already taken that one, take the most recent one that you haven't taken yet.
I'm gonna throw out several ideas. Take what speaks to you and leave what doesn't.
Maybe you need to take a moment to reflect on how you're approaching the games. Do you have any habits you were doing before that you've stopped doing carefully beca…
If you often don't change your answers, that's not a problem in and of itself. What you have to be careful of though, is your BR kind of turning into an echo chamber. If you go into BR biased toward the answer you picked, you're going to tunnel, and…
Don't worry about "normal." We all learn at different paces, so if it's taking you longer, that's fine. Do what's going to allow you to earn you the score you want.
Of course there are people who can do it quickly, but many people study close to a …