If you're shooting for HYS/CCN then I can't imagine it would hurt you. If on the other hand you just want to get the best score you can ('cause like why not?) and are hoping to just get
explanation #1-- D is the only correctly qualified answer choice: D is the only one that talks about "viewers" and all the other answer choices talk about other groups of people that may not
I just "graduated" in may but I am unable to get my transcripts or have them sent. I was originally planning on taking the year off to travel and teach abroad but that plan was crushed. My f
also one test where the removed item is #1 and the section glitches out...I forgot which one, I think it's in the PT20s. I say let's take this opportunity to study these problems to see if
also one test where the removed item is #1 and the section glitches out...I forgot which one, I think it's in the PT20s. I say let's take this opportunity to study these problems to see if
If we're talking about tier 2 and 3 schools, then the value of overall rank v. program rank might depend more on where you want to practice. For example, Pace's #1 environmental program isn&
I got accepted into Pace Law which has the #1 environmental law program, but the school overall is not ranked well. (I'm also not a huge fan of the East Coast, and don't want to work over th
E-- wrong because #1-- we don't know if it is "unforeseen" (but not sure about this reasoning because "fail to consider" can also include "unforeseen" ignorance of s
Congrats, Berkeley is a great school. But unless Berkeley is your #1, I'd suggest you retake. You're capable of pulling that LSAT up, and with a higher LSAT score you'll be competitive
to that question before I come back to question #15 if that question is a necessary assumption question where I read the stimulus and the gap was so small I thought it was valid at first and none of
Student A is against skipping. He read online that you should just do everything in order because it will be fresh in your mind. There are 4 really tough questions on this RC section: #4, #13, #22, an
So the #1 mistake i would say a lot of students make is not trully understanding and focusing on the conclusion in this question type. The conclusion is the golden ticket...
(2) In these newer LR sections, are the toughest questions typically found between questions #11 and 20? Or are 21-26 generally harder? Or has it gotten more random?
* I would not think of it in terms of whether you got the question right or not and when; I'd think of it in terms of "questions where I didn't fully grasp the reasoning". This sta
I usually read the stimulus before I read the question stem. I do that on the first ten questions (since they are usually the easiest). Once I get to #11, I briefly glance at the question stem to see