6 comments

  • Sunday, Apr 09 2023

    @dangelomjoyce773 I would say it depends where you are in your LSAT journey. If you're in the beginning, I would say to just finish some parts of the CC, then drill sections. Then find your weaknesses (if any) and finishing the drills in the CC

    If you've already studied for a while, you should probably only do the parts of the CC you have trouble in.

    I would only do PTs when I have hit a comfortable score on the individual sections. For example, if I'm aiming for a 170 (-7 to -10), I would only begin doing PTs when I can expect to miss -7 to -10 (or less) on a RC+LG+LR section

    1
  • Saturday, Apr 08 2023

    @dangelomjoyce773 said:

    @dangelomjoyce773-2 agreed on the practice sets but when you are doing drills or problem sets in the core curriculum is it also recommended to take an hr/next day break or it it wiser to follow up immediately?

    Now for problem sets I would blind review immediately after. I would take a 10 minute to an hour break then blind review!

    2
  • Saturday, Apr 08 2023

    @sx0302387 so you'd recommend say, getting to the core curriculum problem set doing x amount and then waiting to do a blind review (i.e. opening different tabs for each problem set and treating it similar to a PT?)

    0
  • Saturday, Apr 08 2023

    @dangelomjoyce773-2 agreed on the practice sets but when you are doing drills or problem sets in the core curriculum is it also recommended to take an hr/next day break or it it wiser to follow up immediately?

    1
  • Saturday, Apr 08 2023

    I usually wait for the next day to do it since i am usually drained after a PT

    2
  • Friday, Apr 07 2023

    I would wait at least an hour

    1

Confirm action

Are you sure?