I'm at the point that I just don't know what's wrong with me and why I can't break into the high 160's/170's. Somebody please tell me, because I'm lost. I planned on talking Sep exam and am now panicking.

First, I have always been under the assumption that I can just keep studying till I get the score I want. That's why I've been at this for so long. Here is my history. I have taken Testsmasters in-class course twice. I did the LSAT Trainer by Mike Kim. And most recently done 7Sage. I have taken every LSAT except 76 and 77 (Scores below ordered in the date I took them). When I blind review exams I always get almost a perfect score if not a perfect 180, so I get the concepts. I never run out of time except maybe 3 questions on games and sometimes have to rush my last RC passage a bit and complete in say 5 minuets. The questions I get wrong are a random assortment of easy/hard/different types of questions. It's worth noting that my two biggest jumps were after a prolonged break (easier to see if the info below is graphed). And so I'm wondering if maybe I should just kick my feet up till Sep 24th in order to make another jump. My typical day consists of finishing my 8hrs at work and studying 3-4 hours after work. At this point... I feel like I'm just an idiot. I have studied the LSAT more than anyone I know or read about. I'm about ready to pull my hair out. Any advice?

# Date Taken Score

61 7/19/2013 140 (Day 1 of Testmasters Course 1)

63 8/17/2013 145

54 8/19/2013 147

55 8/22/2013 146

64 9/7/2013 148

56 9/18/2013 152

65 9/28/2013 152

62 9/30/2014 146 (Apx Day 1 of Testmasters Course 2)

68 10/4/2014 153

55 10/11/2014 153

56 10/12/2014 154

58 10/19/2014 155

64 11/8/2014 149

65 11/15/2014 155

67 11/22/2014 156

52 3/11/2015 162

53 6/8/2015 158

7 6/14/2015 164 (The LSAT Trainer Book Diagnostic)

54 6/14/2015 160

9 6/18/2015 161

10 6/22/2015 156

11 6/23/2015 160

12 6/30/2015 159

13 7/8/2015 160

15 7/9/2015 155

16 7/11/2015 160

14 7/12/2015 162

18 7/12/2015 161

19 7/13/2015 158

20 7/16/2015 158

21 7/28/2015 163

22 8/4/2015 161

23 8/5/2015 162

24 8/6/2015 162

25 8/11/2015 161

26 8/11/2015 163

28 8/18/2015 166

29 8/19/2015 160

30 8/20/2015 161

27 12/19/2015 166

31 12/20/2015 154

46 1/24/2016 157 (7Sage Studies began)

47 1/30/2016 161

48 2/7/2016 155

49 2/15/2016 162

50 2/25/2016 161

51 2/27/2016 164

45 3/16/2016 164

32 3/17/2016 166

33 3/21/2016 165

34 3/22/2016 163

35 3/27/2016 163

36 4/2/2016 166

37 4/3/2016 163

39 5/23/2016 164

40 5/26/2016 163

41 5/28/2016 162

42 6/4/2016 163

38 7/1/2016 165

43 7/6/2016 163

44 7/8/2016 161

57 7/12/2016 162

59 7/21/2016

69 7/24/2016 162

70 7/31/2016 165

71 8/7/2016 158

71.5 8/8/2016 162

72 8/23/2016 163

73 8/26/2016

74 8/28/2016 158

75 9/3/2016 160

76

77

1

12 comments

  • Saturday, Sep 10 2016

    @jhaldy10325 Yes,

    @stepharizona288

    I get all the Q's I marked as questionable as right before I grade the test. I am not skipping questions simply because I am aiming so high I don't feel you can skip much of anything if aiming for 170's.

    Actually skipping is one of the keys to getting into the 170s. Unless you are aiming for a 180 (and even then you can often miss 1 or 2 questions) you should be skipping questions that are meant to be curve breakers for the 178/177 student.

    I am not saying to skip a question and never come back to it, but you should skip questions as you go through each section allowing yourself the best opportunity to answer questions that you can score a point on. You can go back to the skipped questions as time allows. There is a person taking PT 37 that shows how to skip and use that strategy to reach a high score.

    0
  • Thursday, Sep 08 2016

    Thank you all for the input! I really appreciate it. Sorry for the late reply. I was having quite the ruff day when I posted that and I took time away from all things LSAT. Currently based on how I feel and what you have all said I'm definitely going to take a break and slow down my studies. Anxiety and burnout may have a lot to do with this. I'm also going to review fundamentals more than just doing PT's. Hopefully I can walk into test day fresh and do well. Otherwise I'll reassess and take a different approach to studies as some of you have recommended.

    But going down the line...

    Yes, @stepharizona288 I get all the Q's I marked as questionable as right before I grade the test. I am not skipping questions simply because I am aiming so high I don't feel you can skip much of anything if aiming for 170's. Typically if I get a Q wrong I just didn't infer something that I should have or didn't go into the questions with a strong sense of what I should be looking for. Somehow I make such inferences when the clock is going is my issue. And thank you, I am proud of what I have done but I'm aiming just a bit higher! :)

    @476.rizeq Thank you for that. :) I did finish the curriculum fast. I did what it said, and thought there would be no harm in just keeping myself fresh once while back. That's because I planned on taking an earlier LSAT. I( have delayed many times. I think that's why I'm so stressed now because I feel I've really reached a point where I need to just do it. I am for sure taking your advise and reviewing fundamentals. That is my plan now till the test because I am hearing that from multiple people. More PT'ing won't help at this point. And I totally agree back to back PT's are dumb. I never plan to do that btw. It's always because something threw me off. I work full time in big law and a late meeting can kill my ability to test. So I only do back to back when my schedule was messed up on a prior day. Wish I didn't have that happen! Life goes on :)

    @jhaldy10325 Thank you for the thoughtful response! Hopefully I can show that potential on test day! You are correct, I may not have taken full advantage of the 7Sage resources and finding my weaknesses. I should put more of my pt results in and analyze it more in depth. And i'm not totally sure how to go about the tutor idea. It's so close to test day and I work full time. But I will for sure be reviewing fundamentals and videos on 7sage. Maybe even revisit old Testmasters material. I agree i'm burned out. This close to September my best bet may be to relax a bit. So that's my current plan becuse it's a bit late in the game to do other tactics. True, I don't want to push back. I'm going to see how this month goes. It's too late to withdraw now I think. And I may do Dec if I don't feel good after taking Step. Is that a a bad idea? I sure don't want 2 scores on my record... but time off now till the Sep test might just allow me to relax enough to show my potential of a high score on test day.

    Same goes to @ngir1293288. I will for sure be taking a week off (half way done, haha) and see how things go. I don't plan to hammer studies before Sep because obviously what I was doing was not working. Thanks!

    @olineali684 it is quite possible I did no leave enough time between exams. Sadly that's a fact of the past. I did was the courses said to do... but ended up pushing back test dates over and over because I was not where I want to be.

    @40450.parham Thank you. I have never recorded myself, but often write how long a game took really quick at the bottom of the game. So that I can see where I lose time. I am always finishing games, but it get's close sometimes. I commonly skip the last game question if it is a replace the rule question so that I can get to other questions. But i have never seen more than 2 of those on an exam. I'm not sure what a BR call is... But my games are actually pretty good. The time i lose on LG is if i get stressed and bomb a game. I do feel I just need to relax and then I do games well. I typically already watch game videos if I missed many or took too long on one. Thanks for the advice!

    0
  • Monday, Sep 05 2016

    @jhaldy10325 nothing is wrong with you, on the contrary you are amazing as you have seen 26 points improvement which is more than many people could ever manage. Your BR score shows you have a better understanding than me, and others addressed most of your concerns. I just want to ask three questions and give a suggestion about LG.

    1- Have you tried to record yourself? specially for LR and LG this may help you to see where you are losing time?

    2- Do you participate in BR calls? They are really helpful, they help to see different perspective on how to attack various question types.

    3- Have you done the LG Bundle and foolproof all the games from PT 1-35? It is part of 7Sage Curriculum. I think if you want to break into 170s anything less than -0 on LG is unacceptable. It is possible to achieve -0 on LG. I started with -16 on LG and ended up -1 to -0 on my most recent PTs.

    My suggestion: after fool proofing LG Bundle, take LG sections of PT 1-35 under time and watch J.Y explanation after completing each section but this time when you watching focus mostly on how he teaches to perceive the right answer choice (instead of brute force) and try to implement his suggestions on the next section.

    Based on what you said I believe not only you can do it but also just want to say the level of commitment you showed inspired me. I wish you luck and hope to see you on BR calls.

    1
  • Monday, Sep 05 2016

    @jhaldy10325 you are doing great. KEEP GOING! Struggles happen to all of us. Keep working on learning and improving. The results will come eventually. Don't let discouragement and the lack of linear progress get you down.

    1
  • Monday, Sep 05 2016

    @jhaldy10325 it seems like you don't take enough breaks between practice tests. Did 7sage make you think about the concepts differently? Was the LSAT trainer helpful? It doesn't seem like any of the materials helped you get to a *much better* understanding of the test. Maybe it's because you rushed through practice tests.

    1
  • Monday, Sep 05 2016

    No matter how long that increase took, it's huge. Be proud of yourself.

    Find those weaknesses and attack!!

    1
  • Sunday, Sep 04 2016

    20 point improvement is huge.

    3
  • Sunday, Sep 04 2016

    @jhaldy10325 Your BR score is what you're capable of and your potential is through the roof. You've just got to figure out how to bridge the gap so that you're achieving that potential.

    @jhaldy10325 always says what I want to say only better! I would echo everything everyone else has already said says by 1000. If there would be one piece of advice I would give you it is that you are 100% capable of your 180 BR score.

    Also try to take a week off. You seem to be burned out. I took1.5 weeks off while I was moving last month and came back and got my first -0 on a LG section. You'd be surprised how much difference a little distance from the test can do for you.

    And also to just work on bridging that gap. If it takes until December or even next year, there is no question it is worth it. Don't stress yourself out working towards a date you can set.

    Good luck!

    2
  • Sunday, Sep 04 2016

    I have done all the Powerscore, all the Manhattan, and Mike Kim's book before coming to 7sage! I don't have much advice, but one thing I've been told is that I probably believed more in the "brute force and volume" method of studying, which can be hugely physically and mentally taxing...and is probably not the most efficient nor an assurance of quality study.

    1
  • Saturday, Sep 03 2016

    So you're definitely not dumb. You score 180 BRs which is something many highly intelligent people do not do. Your BR score is what you're capable of and your potential is through the roof. You've just got to figure out how to bridge the gap so that you're achieving that potential.

    It looks to me like your focus has been wrong. From your timeline (and number of 7Sage logins) it seems like you take PTs to study without stopping to listen to what they're telling you. The value of the PT is not in taking it. It's not even fully in the BR. PTs expose your weaknesses. Once exposed, you must address those weaknesses, and you shouldn't PT again until you are satisfied you've made significant progress. There may not be a clear pattern to what questions you are vulnerable to missing, but I guarantee there is order if you listen closely.

    There's also a lot of things about this test that go way beyond the actual material. Test taking strategies are a really important part of a high scorers success. Given your stats, I think you could benefit a lot, maybe in a very short amount of time, by working with a tutor. Even a few meetings could potentially make a big difference.

    You also are probably super burned out, so I definitely think that taking that break is a good idea.

    You may also want to think about December. I know delaying is really frustrating to even think about, but you just seem to have so much potential I think you could really benefit from the couple extra months if you can develop a more effective study strategy.

    1
  • Saturday, Sep 03 2016

    First, nothing is wrong with you. The LSAT is super super difficult and people from all walks of life have taken it and those who study the right way will succeed. I see you began 7sage almost a year ago - did you finish the curriculum and did you take your time with it? I do see an upward trend in your score for the most part which is good but one thing I also notice is how often you've taken PTs - often back to back and some in the same day! that's very counter productive and won't show any progress. You say you know the concepts - but if that were true you'd get a higher score and even a 180 every now and then. I would say STOP taking PTs, review the fundamentals, and for sure postpone the Sept date.

    2
  • Saturday, Sep 03 2016

    First there is nothing wrong with you.

    Second...

    @jhaldy10325

    said:

    When I blind review exams I always get almost a perfect score if not a perfect 180

    So are you saying that you correct marked all of the answers you were going to get wrong and then got them all right before you graded the test?

    BR is not redoing the entire test untimed its only redoing the ones you marked that you werent sure you go right.

    If thats the case, that you correctly predict which ones you are going to get wrong, are you skipping those questions when youre doing the test to allow yourself a better chance to get the other questions right?

    Have you looked to see what the common things in your reasoning are for the reason why you picked the wrong answer the first time and the right answer the next?

    I have found this is when the missed question logs can be really valuable.

    I am sure other people will have some great advice, but nothing is wrong with you. Just make sure you are getting the most out of your studies.

    You should also be proud of your increase. Youve gone from a 140 to a 166, that is a 26 point increase!

    3

Confirm action

Are you sure?