I have been stuck in the 155-158 range for a month and, recently, I broke into the early 160s (160-161 last couple PTs).

As many people suggested on this forum, I focused on augmenting my BR score. I used to hit around 165-168 (BR) , but now I usually score 170-171(BR).

I am aiming for 165 + in October and something tells me that, if I am hitting 170, with all the time in the world, I still have a ton of work to do.

Timing is still an issue for me and there seems to be a general consensus, among many sagers, that it is intertwined with how well one knows the fundamentals. I am a believer that the two are causally related.

Since BR is one of the best indicators of how well I know the fundamentals, I want to push for more

Any practical tips on how to attain a perfect BR score???

Even a 1 point increase seems incredibly difficult.....

Thank you

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13 comments

  • Sunday, Aug 09 2015

    Thank you for all your sound advice! It's time to put it into action!

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  • Sunday, Aug 09 2015

    Just do the ones you circled... You're going to review your confidence errors later after you score the test anyways so there's no point in covering the one's you got right with 100% certainty...

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    @974 Taking an untimed PT is not the best use of your time because in my opinion you gain a lot more from seeing how your brain works on timed tests, why and how you make confidence errors, and what gaps really exist in your skill set.

    I agree with what you're saying here. I have a couple of extra PT's I've never taken and I might consider doing sections untimed for the purposes of seeing what I still don't understand. But I've also done like ... 50+ timed PT's. And mostly I just kinda feel like it would be refreshing to do this in the next few weeks. And mostly because I might just feel like it one lazy afternoon/evening.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    @guitarnara518

    said:

    Any practical tips on how to attain a perfect BR score???

    Good goal :)

    @guitarnara518 When you work from a clean copy do you guys usually go over the entire test again or just the questions that you circled?

    Back when I had more time and was less burned out, I went through the whole test. Now, I'm happy to do the ones I circled. Typically I am pretty good at circling the ones I miss, so that's good.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    When you work from a clean copy do you guys usually go over the entire test again or just the questions that you circled?

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    I always print one copy of the PT, and then print a clean copy. Go through the answers and REALLY critically look at them. Just because you think your answer is right, doesn't mean it is...... take the time to really reason out why you think your answer is right and the others are wrong. Do the same for all sections.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    I think the better way to go is to make two copies of a PT, take one timed (circling questions for BR as you go), then do those BR questions on the clean PT so you're not fighting against your old answers. Taking an untimed PT is not the best use of your time because in my opinion you gain a lot more from seeing how your brain works on timed tests, why and how you make confidence errors, and what gaps really exist in your skill set.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    Oh Wow I will definitely try to apply the color-code idea! And from your post, I am definitely convinced that I should put more effort into it (45 mins per question !!!!!).

    @kylemitchellx966 the right answer, with absolutely no doubt in my mind.

    I also think this will be KEY

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    @guitarnara518

    Oh

    I see. Yeah I probably wouldn't waste any then. You should take them all in testing conditions. I imagine the only way you can increase your BR score is to either take it more serious, if you can, or change the method of your approach. When I BR LR and I come to a question that is giving me trouble, I type it out and color-code all the logical components of it. I then color code the logical components of the answers. I then rigorously apply rules of logic until I figure out the right answer, with absolutely no doubt in my mind. This sometimes takes like 45 minutes per question LOL. But it's the only way for me to understand...

    I'm convinced that the LSAT is so difficult because of time constraints and test-day conditions. I also believe that almost everyone should be regularly BR'ng well into the 99th percentile.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    @kylemitchellx966 I am on PT 53 and my plan is to take 3 PTs each week until the 3rd week of September

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    @guitarnara518

    I don't know where your concern arises... that leaves you like 35 PT's. Considering you're planning on taking it in October, I can't imagine you'd be able to reasonably take all those in testing conditions anyway without burning out hard.

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    But I am guessing that I shouldn't do this with a fresh PT, after 39+ ?

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  • Saturday, Aug 08 2015

    Obtain a PT and do not take it under testing conditions... just 'BR' it. That is, just take all day to do it. Then score it. Take the time to write out a paragraph if you need to in order to reify your thoughts for a particular question. And if you seriously do not know the right answer, don't select an answer yet. Figure it out. I know that's the whole point of BR, but sometimes we forget and just select something so we can sleep that night.

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