135 posts in the last 30 days

I'm hosting an online seminar tomorrow morning on sufficient and necessary assumptions, how to recognize them and distinguish between them, and how to apply that knowledge to solve real LSAT questions.

This topic has been covered very frequently, but I'd like to share a very intuitive approach that worked for me. Feel free to sign up below!

Registration is free but limited, so sign up quickly!

Event details:

  • Saturday, March 7th at 11:30 to 12:30 EST (Online)

1
User Avatar

Edited Friday, Mar 6

😑 Whatever Meh

There might be Hope

Ok, so I have complained a lot because I didn't see to improve I took an LSAT (with barely any studying less than minimal) I got a 130, I then went to take two exams in Law Hub 142 and 145, took two Prep Test here 145 and 146 if I am not mistaken,

I have complained and might complain in the future. However, I must say, I just took a Section of LR untimed and got a 161 sooooo there might be hope, there just might

So J.Y. sorry for critizicing the course or what not, either way I might change my opinion. I'll just keep studying until I master it and we'll go from there....

4

Hello! I have finally made it to the practice section of the study plan, but I have noticed when taking prep tests the questions are all from sections I did earlier in the week. Is this normal? And, how do I know my score is accurate and not just a reflection on how well I can memorize previous questions? I am worried I am not actually getting a true reflection of my abilities. Is there a way I can change this setting to get fresh questions for the prep test in my practice block section?

5

Did over half of the PT’s in the 140-150‘s and tried some older PT’s in the 100s and 110s, and they felt easier. Generally scored better in them too. Has the LSAT gotten more difficult over the years lol

3

Listen and subscribe:

Apple Podcasts | Spotify

A student who started studying in January is already scoring in the high 160s and wondering: should they take the April LSAT for “real test experience,” even if their goal is the mid-170s? @AlexJacobs and @BaileyLuber break down why rushing into an early test might not be the best move, the reality of the jump from the 160s to the 170s, and why taking the LSAT before you’re ready can sometimes just be an expensive practice test.

1

Hello! I have currently been studying for the LSAT since mid January 2026 and plan on taking it in June and likely August. However, around the beginning of February, I fell a bit behind on the core curriculum and I've been playing catch up. For context, I'm a second semester junior in college, I've found that I have a lot of time during my breaks, but obviously not as much time when I am at school. My main concern is that I feel like I won't be ready to take the exam in June. I start the practice test period this Monday (3/9) so hopefully I start to feel more confident, but right now I am at a standstill. Does anyone have any advice? Would it be optimal to postpone my exam till August, or take one in June and then August?

4
7S

Edited Thursday, Mar 5

7Sage

Official

Am I Burning Out? | The Short Cut | LSAT Podcast

Listen and subscribe:

Apple Podcasts | Spotify

A student asks why their LSAT practice test scores are dropping the more they study. @AlexJacobs and @BaileyLuber break down why this happens to many LSAT students, how burnout and inefficient study can stall progress, and what to do if your studying starts working against you.

4
User Avatar

Edited Wednesday, Mar 4

J.Y.Ping

Founder
🧑‍🎓

New feature: Study Rooms (beta)

Hi all, we just launched Study Room!

They are voice chat rooms with screenshare, like in Discord so you can drill and study together!

This is in beta. There are bugs so please be patient with us, thank you!

105

Hi everyone,

Maybe I've missed a discussion somewhere or missed this in the core curriculum, but does anyone have any tips on how to effectively use the search function for RC? I've currently been using it for stated questions, searching keywords, and then reading around there for context.

Is this a good/smart/effective strategy? Or does anyone have any recommendations?

1

Greetings everyone! I'm using 7Sage to prep for the LSAT for the first time after a couple previous attempts, and I recently finished with the Theory Lessons from my Study Plan tab, however I'm having trouble keeping pace with the drills the practice block is recommending to me. First off, I was recently diagnosed with ADHD. In general, it takes me longer to do assignments and tasks even when I'm focused and this has been a lifelong issue. Since I'm still pretty new to putting the 7Sage Method of Blind Review into practice as well, I find that the Practice Block Drills recommended to me off the Study Plan usually take hours longer than what is prescribed. Secondly, I'm a working man. On most days, I can put in an hour or two of studying with the weekend dedicated to heavier sessions, but with the Study Plan Practice Blocks, I spend most of my time catching up to previous Practice Block Drills with the weekend being much of the same. My highest score on the 2nd Attempt on the LSAT was a 157, and I'm aiming to get to the 175+ range by June. My biggest concern now is that I'm not spending the time that I have effectively drilling by sticking with the Practice Block Drill Sets. Am I overreacting or being impatient? Do I just need to take the time to learn and adapt to the routine, or are there alternatives to the Study Plan Practice Blocks I can do on here that are just as effective with my schedule? Do people even use the Study Plan Practice Blocks? Any feedback is appreciated, thanks in advance!

2

I scored a 157 on my Feb LSAT and am wondering if I should cancel. On my practice tests I've been scoring 164-168 and on the real exam I fumbled the bag and was really overthinking questions. I am retaking it in April and today is the last day I can cancel my score. Any advice over whether or not I should would be appreciated!

2

Wrong Answer Template

Keeping a wrong answer journal has been the best method to address my errors and increase my accuracy. Maybe this template can help you too! At first I did not know how to organize my wrong answer journal to be effective or what I even should keep track of. If you are in the same position I was, I hope this makes your studying journey a little easier.

8

I've been taking timed PTs and then doing BR a little bit after. Each time, my score increases on average 10-15 points. I think part of my problem is timing and stress. Any tips on how I can reduce this gap so my actual PT scores are closer to my BR scores?

8

So I scored within variance, which is totally expected, but one thing I realized is that my LR is far more superior than my RC, how do I close this gap, I believe if I close the RC gap I will be in the mid 160s, and how can I make my LR even better to the point where it’s -2, -1?

For preface, I know that personally right now I neglected RC in my studying previously, but i was looking for tips and advice on top of doing the RC core curriculum

3

Confirm action

Are you sure?