I have been redoing LG games and they're very helpful. I wonder for difficult RC and LR questions that I've blind reviewed before, is it a high yield activity to redo the difficult RC and LR questions? If so, what do you think a good time before reattempting them (eg: 3 days, 1 week or longer). Thank you for your help.

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18 comments

  • Friday, Jul 31 2015

    @jyang72422 That's part of the reason why I love retake. Dawwwww.

    I truly believe confidence boosting is legitimate in its own right. Fresh tests serve a purpose, retakes serve a purpose. Both are, in my opinion, necessary.

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  • Friday, Jul 31 2015

    @2543.hopkins That's part of the reason why I love retake. Dawwwww.

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  • Thursday, Jul 30 2015

    Another value to redoing sections is a confidence boost.

    Unless you're really good at memorization in ways I can't fathom, you won't remember "oh, it's C/it's the answer about famous poets writing for the magazine." Well, you might—but not for nearly as many Q's/AC's as you might think. And while you have likely learned how to do particular questions, retaking sections at least can firm up the sagging bits of our sanity and provide at least some semblance of "yes, it's working." I think the fact that the LSAT does NOT seem to be "working" so much of the time—even after many hundreds of hours—or at least thwarts our typical expectations for ROI is one of the primary challenges of the test. Allowing yourself to experience a confidence boost via a successful retake can help prevent burnout and ensure that the experience retains a positive association.

    We spend a lot of time discounting our retake scores around here. But ya know what? You done a good job and you should allow yourself to feel good about it. You did well on that test on that day, and you should continue to trust the process.

    PT scores aren't just about "predicting" your "test day" scores. They're also a tool to help keep your fires burning when times are lean (as they so ... very ... often ... are ...).

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  • Thursday, Jul 30 2015

    You can cut some questions out and paste them in a notebook and then do them time to time. If you do them more than 3 times and you never miss any of them, then you can remove these questions. When you find that your notebook is getting thinner and thinner, you realize how much you've learned. One of the most common ways that Chinese high school students do, especially those genius. :)

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    @2543.hopkins thank you so much this is great :)

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    One additional tip: I didn't restrict the exercise to questions I got wrong. Sometimes I learned just as much from questions I got right. A lot of the time I would get questions right because I had developed a good LSAT intuition. To further refine that intuition, during the review I would try and articulate the gut feeling that had helped me pick the right answer choice, or, more accurately, eliminate the wrong ones.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    @gs556950 It was great because it doubled as review and warm-up.

    Like this idea a lot!

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    During my prep I rarely re-worked LR and never reworked RC. This was because I was taking PTs so often that usually the BR was enough.

    However, one strategy I did use was to flip through the last 2-3 PTs I had completed and try to remember what I had learned from them. So, for example, as I'm flipping through an old PT I'd see a question I missed and think "my logic was wrong in x way." I would then let my mind sit on that "lesson" for a minute or so to make sure I absorbed what I needed to from it. I would do this exercise for a half hour before taking that day's PT. It was great because it doubled as review and warm-up.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    @rijudev4485 How do you guys copy from pdf prep test files?

    You got a Mac? Command + Shift + 4 then select portion of the screen. Saves to desktop.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    @jsohn001952 Side note

    @974

    and

    @2543.hopkins

    You guys are awesome

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    How do you guys copy from pdf prep test files?

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    OK I figured that was the only way about it. Thanks.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    You could copy all the pages as PDFs and then cut the questions you want and paste them into a word document... As long as you're not sharing them I don't think you'd be violating any copyrights or anything.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    I think I might have seen a post somewhere about this but I can't seem to recall where it was. I bought the Cambridge packets by section type and I've been focusing on my weaknesses. I'm taking a break from PTs for a few days to recalibrate some fundamental issues. These packets are so helpful. Im finally seeing a general pattern! Anyways, I want to take it a step further and drill some full length LR practice sections. I saw someone posting how to cut/paste and create individual ones, like the way @974 mentioned. Is there an easy way to go about this? If not, is there a way I can buy old LR sections from prep tests 1-35? Or just redo LR sections from preptests I've already completed. Any thoughts?Side note @974 and @2543.hopkins You guys are awesome

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    You can also "star" questions you miss on PT's using 7sage analytics ... This is HUGE to me as I can simply select all of my tests and sort by the stars! And then target them with my intellect.

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  • Wednesday, Jul 29 2015

    You can also compile a list of every question you get wrong during PTs and then make new drilling sections with just those questions.

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  • Tuesday, Jul 28 2015

    Thank you!

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  • Tuesday, Jul 28 2015

    1 day is good for me and I find redoing them very helpful in understanding the fundamentals

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