4 comments

  • Friday, Jul 26 2013

    Great advice James. Confidence on the LSAT is such an underrated factor. And getting cocky is just LSAT suicide.

    1
  • Sunday, Jun 23 2013

    James, Thank you a lot for your advice, especially for the TLS one. Helps a lot. Mindset is the most important thing when we approach the question.

    0
  • Friday, Jun 21 2013

    Even if there were a complete and definitive answer to this question, which there is not, I’m not sure how one would benefit from such a list.

    “Freebies” are easy questions, and that is subjective to the individual test taker. So, any question type can potentially be a freebie.

    Focus on your weaknesses but do not neglected your supposed strengths. Eventually you’ll see a question of each given type as a freebie.

    It’s important not to bias yourself to the supposed strength or weakness of a question type. If you believe a question type is hard or easy, you will approach them differently. Approach each question with a critical eye.

    The following advice has been given by a student from Top-law-schools.com,

    In terms of your attitude, you need balance when approaching the LSAT. You won't do well if you're intimidated by the test, a section type, or question type. At the same time, you won't do well if you start to get cocky and think that the test, a section type, or question type are easy. Each and every question needs to be treated as a bomb squad member would treat a live explosive. Whether it's a hand grenade (LR question #1) or a nuclear bomb (LR question #19 parallel reasoning), they can both blow up and kill you if you're not careful. I found that I would miss questions if I fell into either extreme. Through practice you should be able to get yourself into the correct mindset.

    7
  • Friday, Jun 21 2013

    And definitely those main point questions.

    0

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