6 comments

  • Friday, Nov 16 2018

    You will have to get very good at getting the low hanging fruit on LR. Easy questions should feel easy and you should be able to breeze through them. This will give more time for the curve breakers. You should be doing enough LR blind review and watching enough of J.Y.'s explanations that you start to get a really good feel for LR questions. That's what worked for me.

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  • Friday, Nov 16 2018

    Tbh, I did not spend much time on non-lsat reading. What readings do you recommend? I feel like I'm struggling with the LR and keeping it consistent. What were some strategies you used to study for the LR and RC? I feel like I don't even know what to study because I don't want to keep ruining PTs, but at the same time I don't want to only be using 1-40 PTs. I've heard that it just gets harder and is more different in the 70s and 80s. Thank you so much for helping!

    @gurikaurkahlon743 said:

    I went from a 163 in September 2017 to a 172 in September 2018. Studying a ton and not getting psyched out on test day were keys for me. With your score breakdown, it sounds like you could benefit from more leisure reading. How much time do you spend per day on non-lsat reading?

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  • Friday, Nov 16 2018

    I went from a 163 in September 2017 to a 172 in September 2018. Studying a ton and not getting psyched out on test day were keys for me. With your score breakdown, it sounds like you could benefit from more leisure reading. How much time do you spend per day on non-lsat reading?

    0
  • Thursday, Nov 15 2018

    Thank you so much! For PT 41it was a 161with these stats- LG: -2, LR: -6,-10, RC: -8). The BR was 170 with these stats LG: -0, LR: -0,-6, RC: -4). Could you provide any advice?

    @drbrown2259 said:

    Hey @gurikaurkahlon743,

    Can you post your latest section breakdown (e.g. LG: -3, LR: -7,-5, RC: -10)? That would help other 7Sagers give you good advice!

    0
  • Thursday, Nov 15 2018

    There are so many tools. Think about what you would expect to hear from a coach or a tutor. Identify weaknesses using the LSAT analytics resource and work on those. Go back to the core curriculum. Be honest about your blind review process. Look into your timing strategy. You have plenty of time to address every weakness and reinforce the strengths you already have. Both will translate into higher accuracy and speed. Your BR max should improve and your timed scores should as well.

    1
  • Thursday, Nov 15 2018

    Hey @gurikaurkahlon743,

    Can you post your latest section breakdown (e.g. LG: -3, LR: -7,-5, RC: -10)? That would help other 7Sagers give you good advice!

    0

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