For rule #10, what if the person did not intend to be yelling but their keyboard was broken? Or what if they did not know the social keyboard etiquette and just typed in all caps (I know of some peopl
For rule #10, what if the person did not intend to be yelling but their keyboard was broken? Or what if they did not know the social keyboard etiquette and just typed in all caps (I know of some peopl
For rule #10, what if the person did not intend to be yelling but their keyboard was broken? Or what if they did not know the social keyboard etiquette and just typed in all caps (I know of some peopl
with these 3 rules, even if I do use Rule #1 to split it up into three different worlds, rules #2 and #3 won't add anything into whittling down these game boards." It's taken me some t
why I think proper sleep/nutrition/exercise is #1. Everything (including studying for the LSAT) comes after. Don't compromise the important three cuz really everything else depends on those fact
I do think it’s reasonable that your goal score changes as you study. When I started out, I had a goal of 165+ because I’d be safe to get into my #1 school. However, as studying went on, my goal schoo
1.Ideally, you don't want to be in this spot,I recommend looking at 5 flaw questions from LSAT history daily. Set a 30 minute timer, pick them apart, work the answer choices from wrong to right.
Thank you all! Getting the Rothman would be a dream. UCLA is great too. I just like USC's environment and campus a little more, I live by it, I think ultimately tuition with aid will be lower, a
I wouldn't worry much about your CV, tbh. Your GPA is good and with a 170+ lsat you'll likely be in at NYU. Make the LSAT your #1 priority outside of work. The fact you've been out of U
Hi @sujnkm! Like @10000019 said, it's going to better help us if we know your breakdown. For example, are you getting -0 on Logic Games consistently? That's the #1 way to improve your score