@jocelynye423 The problem sets are pre-made and are static sets of 5 questions in increasing order of difficulty and newness. For example, the Most Strongly Supported Problem Set #1 contains the easie
opinion, check out PT48 Passage 2 (Louise Gluck) #12. I think this passage shows that the formal arrangement of the text, as you noted for PT82 Passage A, is something the LSAT wants us to pay attent
For #12, the question asks, "According to the passage, cytologists in the late nineteenth century were critical of the cell research of biochemists because cytologists believed that...?" I a
There are however, sources that show you how real people in industry view schools. For example, Duke is at the bottom of the T14 at #12 this year. However, their graduates are viewed near the top of
THE. Harvard, ranked 3rd in the US, falls below #12 Duke in the same survey. I would think in Harvard's case that is fine, and not an argument against it because the brand of the university as
the question stem and move on to the answers. On #12, if I immediately see that the question stem is Powerful, I just skip the question and go to the next Provable I can find. Once I am done with the
I really hope you aren’t making your school decisions based on rankings. Idc if a school is ranked #14 or #15 or #12 if it has an oddly low employment % and from what I’ve heard students don’t enjoy a
I was thrilled to see Berkeley jump up from #12 to #9 since it's one of my top choices. But I wonder if it'll keep climbing or drop back down next year? And I also wonder how much the ranki
I would go to Berkeley even if it meant taking on a lot of debt. Rankings aren't everything but they are very important. Berkeley is ranked #9 and Howard is #128. The opportunities that you'
in Seattle, attending Seattle U (which is ranked #120) is still a viable option. There aren't many law schools around here, and SU actually does pretty well locally. So there are a lot of things