14 comments

  • Saturday, Sep 19 2015

    @lil2015712 having accent does not give you advantage, but being able to use and interpret law in both languages gives you advantage. haha

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  • Saturday, Sep 19 2015

    Thank you all. @alejoroarios925 @jyang72422 , are you serious? I may disagree that having an accent can have any advantage to be honest :)

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  • Saturday, Sep 19 2015

    @lil2015712 Does it happen to you that you read an LR stimulus or RC paragraph and say: what the hell did I just read?

    This happens to well educated native speakers as well so don't get too worried about it; while some of this is a product of not being a native speaker, much is due to the dark lords ensuring confusion throughout the test.

    1
  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    @jyang72422

    @alejoroarios925

    , what could be better than debating with native speaker in the courtroom with our non-english accent? That is what makes us great not weak!

    touche....point taken

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    @alejoroarios925, what could be better than debating with native speaker in the courtroom with our non-english accent? That is what makes us great not weak!

    1
  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Thank you very much all. I very appreciate it. @974 also suggested listening to audiobook, which I am doing now. Before I started studying for the LSAT, in other words when I had more time, I used to read novels. And a lot of that. But that has nothing to do with understanding RC :(.

    Does it happen to you that you read an LR stimulus or RC paragraph and say: what the hell did I just read?

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    don't focus on what makes you weak, focus on what makes you great :)

    2
  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Non native speaker here. I don't think there is a difference between the strategy you should take and any other native speaker should take to get better and improve timing. Just practice more and familiarize yourself more with the exam. There are no excuses! True, it might be a bit harder for you to get used to the LSAT language than for a native speaker but so what? Life is not supposed to be that easy and everyone has their own difficulties. Just be confident on yourself, work extra hard, read a few RC passages before going to bed every night if need be and kill the LSAT!

    Cheers.

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Focus on the core and reasoning structure might help. But sometimes I got tripped over when I overlooked some detailed information.

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    I'm a native speaker and I had the same trouble... I just took tests until I was able to think quickly and accurately enough to answer level 1,2, and 3 questions in less than 50 seconds... Quick thinking under pressure is just another skill to develop.

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    As a non-native speaker, I am also strugglig with timing. Still, speed can be increased as you drill your technique.

    Don't self-suggest that we are non-natives, which would lead to more panic during the test; just practice and BR, which is the same way natives gain their confidence on speed!

    1
  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Hi @7sagestudentservices , true. No strategy intended. I didn't get a response when I posted in the afternoon so I posted in TLS afterwards in the evening.

    I am probably targeting a very small group with my this question. Sorry to all 7sagers who may understand my intention differently.

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Same person from tls... Great posting strategy

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  • Friday, Sep 18 2015

    Bump

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