3) PLAN breaks for yourself. Burnout is real. Spending all day working and studying is tiresome. I emphasize planning them because if you don't anticipate that you will need a break, you probably
Same! still waiting on a decisions for half my schools. I got waitlisted to my #1 which was a REACH (below on GPA and LSAT) but the Notre Dame stuff has me stressed. Now I'm terrified of this cyc
Since the stim goes on to give us Morton's book, and you can assume that Morton's book falls into the less than ideal situation, you don't even worry about using option #1. So what I
I think that this is one rare occasion where 7sage doesn't do a great job of answering the question. #19 choice A isn't wrong because insular is incorrect (quite honestly it might be a bette
I have a quick question regarding the third passage of PT18. I don't quite get question #17. The answer is C, which states that the council "did not have complete autonomy in governing the C
Waitlist: do whatever the school asks in their waitlist email. Every 3-4 weeks and especially just after/before their deposit deadline write a letter of continued interest loci. You can print and hand
OP, #1 is the correct negation, since you can negate anything by adding "it is not the case that" at the beginning. As you noted, however, it's not particularly helpful in understanding
Waitlist: do whatever the school asks in their waitlist email. Every 3-4 weeks and especially just after/before their deposit deadline write a letter of continued interest loci. You can print and hand
Huh? Waitlisted at #7 Penn and denied at #13 Cornell? Then waitlisted at #14 Georgetown?? Here's a link to a very helpful and anxiety-lowering video from Spivey Consulting on youtube https://www.
For the timing issue on LR, try to go through the first 10 questions in 10 minutes so that you have more time on the more difficult questions (#19-25/26). They're typically the easiest and most s
none of these 2 claims are well supported: by claiming #1, author would need to commit an equivocation flaw; by claiming #2, author is concluding "philosophy that countenances chaos → deserves no
@"LOWERCASE EVERYTHING" Thanks! So essentially the only questions that you leave entirely blank are the ones from the #1 category? For the other categories you still bubble in an answer even
I have been studying for 4 months, understand LR well, (get about -4 to -5 wrong on it after BR, usually the last questions), but on the actual test I can NEVER and I mean NEVER get past #17. It feels