Hey y'all, I'm Karl. I will be attending law school this year to focus on constitutional law, academia, and entrepreneurship.

I teach in-person LSAT classes at local universities and tutor students one-on-one. My focus is on teaching students to be at ease reading slowly, summarizing as they go, and engaging with the content. I diagnose weak points and give you plans to fix them. You will build good habits for approaching questions, getting "unstuck" when caught in a 50/50, and contextualizing your results to become more effective. The skills you learn will carry over into your law school journey and career as a lawyer.

The LSAT is only one part of the admissions process. I help with essays, C&F statements, addenda, interview preparation, school targeting, and more. I am here to help you get results that will change your life, not just go over questions for an hour. I want you to succeed, and that means being warm and supportive along the way.

Remember, underneath the LSAT's dense language there are simple structures you can learn, but you have to put in the effort. StevenBlauert's post is GREAT. Check it out. It really is that easy.

If you are interested, DM me, leave me a message here, or send me an email at Karl@RedwoodLSAT.com. We will arrange a free consultation!

Package discounts on LSAT tutoring and admissions assistance are available:

10 hours @ $700 ($70/hr)

20 hours @ $1200 ($60/hr)

12

10 comments

  • 3 days ago

    I am interested if you are still taking students

    1
  • Friday, May 8

    I am Interested

    1
  • Friday, May 8

    Can you put any testimonials here from former students? Curious as to the age old question of how long will it take - so many things have failed me. Thanks

    1
  • Sunday, May 3

    interested

    1
  • Wednesday, Feb 11

    interested, please message me

    2
  • Wednesday, Feb 11

    interested! message me

    2
  • Tuesday, Feb 3

    Hello - can you point me in the direction of StevenBlauert's post you've mentioned?

    2
    Tuesday, Feb 3

    @Jessica73 Likewise!

    2
    Tuesday, Feb 3

    @Jessica73 me too please !! :)

    1
    Karl! Independent Tutor OP
    Wednesday, Feb 4

    @AlexandriaDeMattia https://7sage.com/discussion/56374/from-137-diagnostic-to-180-official-lsat-tutor

    I endorse. The LSAT requires developing skills, and that requires focus, persistence, and forgiveness. Give it an hour a day and remember the questions are solvable.

    I think one of the biggest hurdles with the LSAT is that it requires you to read in a way that you have not been taught to read. Most of school, casual reading, etc. is intended for you to sit back and absorb without much critical thinking. Then you repeat it back and get an A, or have an emotional reaction to what you hear and that is that.

    The LSAT demands you pull yourself out of the words, see how things fit (or don't) together, and be critical of what is being said. If you skim over something, in most other situations you can shrug and just keep reading. The next sentences will probably explain the previous one. On the LSAT, if you get sloppy and go too quick, you fill your memory up with fragments and misunderstandings and they compound. Kinda like making a mistake early on in a math problem, then carrying over that mistake until you get the wrong answer. Then you have to go back and look through the entire equation and find out where you went wrong, and that is REALLY HARD.

    His take it slow, don't stress, but do the work advice is perfect.

    4
You've reached the end of the comments.

Confirm action

Are you sure?