I'm feeling pretty confident with the fundamentals now and have been consistently scoring around a 153-155.
Right now, most of my studying for LR is watching or attending lessons because I like doing the timed questions alongside the instructor and hearing the explanations in real time. It's been working well, but I'm wondering if there's a more effective way to improve from here.
For those of you who are past the fundamentals, what does your study routine actually look like?
Are you drilling every day?
Reviewing wrong answers?
Taking timed sections?
Watching lessons, or mostly practicing on your own?
Are you switching between RC and LR per day?
What made the biggest difference in helping you break into the hight 150s or 160s?
2 comments
Hey there! At this stage in your journey, the bulk of your growth is probably going to come from question-type specific drills. Look at the types of questions you've been getting wrong on the last couple PTs, as well as the ones you're getting wrong on BR AND the questions that you're getting wrong, but took you some extra time. Focus on 1-2 question types a day, and drill them exclusively! "Stair climber" drills can be really helpful: start with drills of just 3* questions; when you get them all right, you can move up in difficulty.
Reviewing wrong answers is also hugely helpful! Looking at the right answer is great, but looking at why the answer you chose is wrong and why you chose it in the first place are equally helpful. If studying for the LSAT is training your brain to think a certain way, understanding how your brain works in the first place is an important step.
Happy studying :)
@PhoebeHopp Will do, Thank you!